EXE 2018: 4th International Workshop on Executable Modeling 2018 MODELS Conference Copenhagen, Denmark, October 14, 2018 |
Conference website | http://www.modelexecution.org/exe2018 |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=exe2018 |
Abstract registration deadline | July 10, 2018 |
Submission deadline | July 17, 2018 |
We are pleased to invite you to submit papers to the Fourth International Workshop on Executable Modeling (EXE 2018), held in conjunction with the ACM/IEEE 20th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS) at Copenhagen, Denmark, on October 14, 2018.
Scope
The complexity of modern software-intensive systems, time-to-market pressures, and the need for high quality systems are current challenges faced by the software and systems engineering industry. To address these challenges, model-driven engineering (MDE) advocates the elevation of models into the center of the development process. Models provide abstractions over the system to be developed, while also providing enough detail to automate the development of implementation artifacts and perform early analysis.
In this context, executable models become more and more important. They provide abstractions of complex system behaviors and constitute the basis for performing early analyses of that behavior. The ability to analyze a system’s behavior early in its development has the potential to turn executable models into important assets of model-driven software development processes.
Despite the potential benefits of executable models, there are still many challenges to solve, such as the lack of maturity in the definition of and tooling for executable modeling languages, and the limited experience with executable modeling in much of the software and systems development industry. EXE 2018 will provide a forum for researchers and practitioners to discuss these challenges and propose potential solutions, as well as to assess and advance the state-of-the-art in this area.
Topics
Topics of interest to the workshop include but are not limited to the following:- Methodologies, languages, techniques, and methods for designing and implementing executable modeling languages
- Case studies and experience reports on the successful or failed adoption of executable modeling in different application domains and application contexts
- Model execution tools for the (dynamic) validation, verification, and testing of systems (e.g., model animation, debugging, simulation, trace exploration, model checking, symbolic execution)
- Tracing model executions and analyzing model execution traces
- Automation techniques for the development of model execution tools
- Evolution in the context of executable modeling (e.g., evolution of executable modeling languages, execution semantics, executable models, model execution tools)
- Verification of semantic conformance (e.g., among executable modeling languages, executable models, model execution tools)
- Customization of executable modeling languages and model execution tools (e.g., semantic variation points,profiles)
- Composition, extension, and reuse of executable modeling languages and model execution tools
- Integration of executable modeling languages and programming languages
- Semantics-aware model transformations and code generation
- Scalability of model execution and execution-based model analysis
- Execution of partial and underspecified models
- Model execution in the presence of non-determinism and concurrency
- Surveys and benchmarks of different approaches for the development of executable modeling languages, model execution, and execution-based model analysis
Submission Guidelines
We will accept the following types of submissions:
- Research papers (up to 6 pages) presenting novel and innovative approaches in executable modeling. We also strongly encourage the submission of comparative studies and benchmarks of existing approaches in one of the workshop topics.
- Experience reports (up to 6 pages) presenting experiences and lessons learned in executable modeling. Experience reports should discuss knowledge gained from an executable modeling project and identify key challenges encountered.
- Position papers (up to 3 pages) presenting new ideas or early research results in executable modeling.
- Tool demonstration papers (up to 3 pages) presenting novel tools or novel features of state-of-the-art tools related to executable modeling. Submissions of tool demonstration papers should consist of two parts. The first part (up to 3 pages) will be included in the proceedings and should describe the tool presented (please include the URL of the tool if available). The second part (up to 2 pages) should explain how the tool demonstration will be carried out at the workshop, including examples and screenshots.
All submissions have to follow the ACM sigconf formatting instructions. Submissions created with LaTeX are preferred, but using Word is allowed.
Submit your paper electronically as PDF via EasyChair at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=exe2018.
All submissions will be evaluated by at least three members of the program committee. Research papers, experience reports, and tool demonstration papers will be evaluated concerning novelty, correctness, significance, readability, and alignment with the workshop call. Position papers will be evaluated primarily concerning validity and ability to generate discussion (even controversy), as well as alignment with the workshop call. Furthermore, all submissions must be original work and must not have been previously published or being under review elsewhere.
For each accepted paper, at least one of the authors must register for the workshop, participate fully in the workshop, and present the paper at the workshop.
Publication
A pre-workshop version of the accepted papers will be available on the workshop website and a post-workshop version will be published as CEUR workshop proceedings.
Committees
Program Committee
- Francis Bordeleau, Canada
- Andrei Chiş, feenk, Switzerland
- Federico Ciccozzi, Mälardalen University, Sweden
- Tony Clark, Aston University, United Kingdom
- Peter Clarke, Florida International University, United States
- Benoit Combemale, IRISA and University of Rennes, France
- Jonathan Corley, University West Georgia, USA
- Julien Deantoni, University Nice Sophia Antipolis, CNRS, I3S, Inria, France
- Thomas Degueule, CWI, The Netherlands
- Davide Di Ruscio, University of L'Aquila, Italy
- Juergen Dingel, Queen's University, Canada
- Nicolas Hili, IRT Saint Exupéry, France
- Nicholas Matragkas, University of Hull, United Kingdom
- Marjan Mernik, University of Maribor, Slovenia
- Zoltan Micskei, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary
- Domenik Pavletic, Robert Bosch GmbH, Germany
- Ernesto Posse, Zeligsoft, Canada
- Taylor Riche, National Instruments, United States
- Bran Selic, Malina Software Corporation, Canada
- Cortland Starrett, One Fact Inc, United States
- Jérémie Tatibouët, CEA, France
- Massimo Tisi, Ecole des Mines de Nantes, France
- Simon Van Mierlo, University of Antwerp, Belgium
- Andreas Wortmann, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Thanos Zolotas, University of York, United Kingdom
Organizing committee
- Tanja Mayerhofer, TU Wien, Austria
- Philip Langer, EclipseSource, Austria
- Ed Seidewitz, nMeta, USA
- Jeff Gray, University of Alabama, USA
- Erwan Bousse, TU Wien, Austria
Venue
EXE 2018 will be held as part of the MODELS 2018 conference on October 14, 2018 at Copenhagen, Denmark.
Contact
If you have further questions about EXE 2018, do not hesitate to contact us via an email to exe [at] modelexecution.org.