[AISWorld] CfP: 12th Domain-Specific Modeling workshop
Juha-Pekka Tolvanen
jpt at metacase.com
Wed Jun 13 06:31:48 EDT 2012
Call for Papers and demonstrations
THE 12TH WORKSHOP ON DOMAIN-SPECIFIC MODELING
Tucson, Arizona, USA (at OOPSLA/SPLASH conference)
22 October 2012
http://www.dsmforum.org/events/DSM12/
An upward shift in abstraction leads to a corresponding increase in productivity. In the past this has occurred when programming languages have evolved towards a higher level of abstraction. Today, domain-specific languages provide a viable solution for continuing to raise the level of abstraction beyond coding, making development faster and easier.
Domain-specific modeling (DSM) provides a modern solution to demands for higher productivity by constricting the gap between problem and solution modeling. In the past, productivity gains have been sought through new programming languages. Today, domain-specific modeling languages provide a viable solution for continuing to raise the level of abstraction beyond coding, making development faster and easier.
In DSM the models are constructed using concepts that represent things in the problem domain, not concepts of a given programming language. The modeling language follows the domain abstractions and semantics, allowing developers to perceive themselves as working directly with domain concepts. The models represent simultaneously the design, implementation and documentation of the system, which can be generated directly from them. In a number of cases the final products can be automatically generated from these high-level specifications with domain-specific code generators. This automation is possible because of domain-specificity: both the modeling language and code generators fit the requirements of a narrowly-defined domain, usually inside a single organization.
The workshop welcomes submissions that address Domain-Specific Modeling on practical or theoretical levels. Our main focus is on graphical domain-specific languages but we will also consider submissions on textual or other DSLs. Some of the issues that we would like to see addressed in this workshop are:
- Industry/academic experience reports describing success/failure in implementing and using DSM languages/tools
- Approaches to identify constructs for DSM languages
- Empirical studies or assessments that suggest best practices for DSM language design
- Novel features in language workbenches / tools to support DSM
- Approaches to implement metamodel-based modeling languages
- Metamodeling frameworks and languages
- Modularization technologies for DSM languages and models
- Novel approaches for code generation from domain-specific models
- Issues of support/maintenance for systems built with DSM
- Evolution of languages along with their domain
- Organizational and process issues in DSM adoption and use
- Demonstrations of working DSM solutions (languages, generators, frameworks, tools)
- Identification of domains where DSM can be most productive in the future (e.g. embedded systems, product families, systems with multiple implementation platforms)
Important Dates
Initial submission: August 10
Author Notification: September 15
Final version ready: October 3
Workshop day: October 22
Submission Information
The workshop welcomes four types of submissions:
1) Full papers describing ideas on either a practical or theoretical level. Full papers should emphasize what is new and significant about the chosen approach and compare it to other work in the field.
2) Experience reports on applying DSM. Papers should describe case studies and experience reports on the application, successes or shortcomings of DSM. The experiences can be related to language creation or use, tooling, or organizational issues, among others.
3) Position papers describing work in progress or an author's position regarding current DSM practice.
4) DSM demonstrations describing a particular language, generator, or tool for a particular domain. During the workshop, the DSM solution presented in the paper can be demonstrated to the participants.
Papers should be submitted by August 10, 2012. Contributions should be submitted electronically in PDF format. Submitted papers must conform to the ACM SIG Proceedings style - except that the copyright box on the first page must be removed (2-column, see templates). The maximum length of a submission is 6 pages. Please see the submission details at the workshop webpage (http://www.dsmforum.org/events/DSM12).
The accepted papers will be published both on the workshop web site and proceeding in ACM DL.
Program committee
Pierre America, Philips
Robert Baillargeon, Panasonic Automotive Systems, USA
Peter Bell, General Assembly
Abhishek Dubey, Vanderbilt University
Brandon Eames, Sandia National Laboratories
Jeff Gray, University of Alabama
Ethan Jackson, Microsoft
Jürgen Jung, DHL
Steven Kelly, MetaCase
Shih-Hsi Liu, California State University, Fresno
Pedro Molina, icinetic
Matti Rossi, Aalto University School of Economics
Bernhard Rumpe, RWTH Aachen University
Keng Siau, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Jonathan Sprinkle, University of Arizona
Massimo Tisi, INRIA
Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, MetaCase
Markus Völter, independent consultant
Alan Wegmann, EPFL
Organizing committee
Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, MetaCase
Jonathan Sprinkle, University of Arizona
Matti Rossi, Aalto University School of Economics
Jeff Gray, University of Alabama
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