CFP Combinatorial and Algorithmic Aspects of Networking
From: Alex Lopez-Ortiz (alopez-o_at_softbase.math.uwaterloo.ca)
Date: 03/19/04
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Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2004 22:20:49 +0000 (UTC)
Workshop on Combinatorial and Algorithmic Aspects of Networking
CALL FOR PAPERS
August 5th - 7th, 2004
Banff International Research Station (BIRS)
The Internet because of its size, decentralized nature, and loosely
controlled architecture provides a hotbed of challenges that are amenable
to mathematical analysis and algorithmic techniques. This workshop brings
together mathematicians, theoretical computer scientists and network
specialists. This fast growing area is an intriguing intersection of
Computer Science/Graph Theory/Game Theory/Networks.
Original research papers are solicited. The list of topics for the
conference includes, but is not limited to:
Economics, Game Theory and the Internet
Geometric Routing
Web Caching
Combinatorics
Tomography
Peer-to-peer Systems
Graph Theory/Web Graph
Data Stream Analysis
Statistical Distributions
Optimization
as they relate to Networks in general and the Internet in particular.
The workshop will be organized as a series of talks with time for focused
discussions. We solicit general participation and invite presentations on
all aspects of networking challenges that can be addressed using
techniques from theoretical computer science and mathematics. The goal of
of the workshop and working group is to foster interdisciplinary
collaborations among researchers interested in this field.
Submissions
Authors should send an extended abstract in postscript or PDF format by
May 3, 2004. The paper should not exceed 12 pages in length on
letter-size paper using 11 point or larger font.
Submission Deadline: May 3, 2004
Notification Deadline: June 1, 2004
Submission instructions will be available in
http://db.uwaterloo.ca/~alopez-o/caan.html
We anticipate that the proceedings of the workshop will be published
by Springer-Verlag in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science series,
and will be available for distribution after the conference.
BIRS
The Banff International Research Station (BIRS) is a collaborative effort
of the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Science (PIMS, Canada) and
the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI, Berkeley, USA).
Located in beautiful Banff, Alberta, Canada, BIRS hosts mathematical
workshops for forty weeks of the year, principally in five- or two- day
formats. The objective of these workshops is to foster collaboration and
creativity in various areas of mathematics and computer science. BIRS is
part of the Banff Centre, an international centre for the creative arts.
http://www.pims.math.ca/birs
Participation in the workshops at BIRS is by invitation only. As space is
limited, we can only guarantee an invitation for one co-author for each paper.
Program Committee
Azer Bestavros, Boston University, USA
Anthony Bonato, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada
Andrei Broder, IBM Research, USA
Hervi Brvnnimann, Polytechnic University, USA
Adam Buchsbaum, AT&T Labs, USA
Edith Cohen, AT&T Labs, USA
Erik Demaine, MIT, USA
Luisa Gargano, University of Salerno, Italy
Ashish Goel, Stanford University, USA
Angele Hamel, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada (Organizing Comm. Chair)
Monika Henzinger, Google, USA
Jeannette Janssen, Dalhousie University, Canada
David Karger, MIT, USA
Srinivasan Keshav, University of Waterloo, Canada
Alejandro Lopez-Ortiz, University of Waterloo, Canada (Program Chair)
Bruce Maggs, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Rajeev Motwani, Stanford University, USA
Ian Munro, University of Waterloo, Canada
Tim Roughgarden, University of California at Berkeley, USA
Christos Papadimitrou, University of California at Berkeley, USA
David Peleg, Weizmann Institute, Israel
Torsten Suel, Polytechnic University, USA
Eli Upfal, Brown University, USA
Alessandro Vespignani, Laboratoire de Physique Theoretique, France
-- Alex Lopez-Ortiz alopez-o@uwaterloo.ca http://db.uwaterloo.ca/~alopez-o Assistant Professor School of Computer Science University of Waterloo
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