Call for Papers
WORKSHOP ON MODELS, METHODS AND TOOLS
FOR REPRODUCIBLE NETWORK RESEARCH (MoMeTools)
in conjunction with SIGCOMM 2003,
Karlsruhe, Germany
25 August 2003
ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS
Compared with other scientific areas such as experimental physics,
network research appears significantly less mature concerning
methodology. Internet research is affected by models that sometimes are
poorly suited to the problem under investigation, by lack of
understanding of properties and limitations of the models used, and by
tools that have various limitations and that are poorly integrated.
While each of the methods analysis, simulation, emula-tion, testbed
experiments and Internet-wide experiments have their own particular
strengths and shortcomings, typically only one of these methods is used
to investigate a particular problem. Certain weaknesses of the chosen
methods can have unwanted implications on the results and deductions
made from them. There appears to be insufficient comparison or
adjustment between results obtained by different methods.
The goal of this workshop is to critically assess the current models,
methods and tools for identifying shortcomings of the state-of-the-art,
and to discuss approaches for improvements and innovation. The workshop
aims for sharing knowledge about how to apply today's tools most
successfully, and for generating a common understanding about what is
needed for net-work research to progress more rapidly and to ensure
widely reproducible results.
The workshop solicits submissions that improve our understanding of the
current state-of-the art, and that help to identify improved models,
methods and tools.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
Topics of interest could include, but are not limited to:
- Reproducibility of experimental network research
- Investigation of scaling effects
- Common code basis for simulation and implementation
- Mathematical methods for error assessment
- Examples and review of commonly observable mistakes
- Simulation vs. emulation vs. testbed experiments
- Comparison of practical, analytical and theoretical evaluations
- Benchmarking and measurement techniques
- Tools for visualization of network behaviour; usage and assessment of tools
- Generation of realistic network topologies and traffic patterns
Accepted papers will appear in workshop proceedings published by ACM
SIGCOMM and will be placed in the ACM Digital Library. Following the
workshop, a report on the discussions and conclusions of the workshop
will be published.
WHAT AND HOW TO SUBMIT
The workshop solicits the following types of submissions:
1) Full papers, 2) Position papers on potentially controversial or
provocative topics, and
3) Tool demonstration papers. These will be presented in a practical
session consisting of short presentations combined with live
demonstrations of tools. The corresponding papers undergo a review
process. For illustration purposes of a tool, it is also possible to
submit an online video clip in addition to a papers.
Papers should be no longer than 14 pages; shorter and concise papers are
also highly welcome. Papers should not be anonymized. See the submission
webpage (not yet available) for full submission requirements in the near
future. For any questions please contact MoMeTools@tm.uka.de.
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline May 4, 2003
Notification of acceptance May 26, 2003
Camera ready papers June 12, 2003
Workshop date August 25, 2003
ORGANIZERS, PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
Georg Carle, University of Tuebingen, carle@informatik.uni-tuebingen.de
Hartmut Ritter, Freie Universität Berlin, hritter@inf.fu-berlin.de
Klaus Wehrle, ICSI/University of Karlsruhe, wehrle@icsi.berkeley.edu
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Joachim Charzinski, Siemens
Jon Crowcroft, University of Cambridge
Christophe Diot, Sprint ATL
Anja Feldmann, University of Munich
Sally Floyd, ICSI/ICIR, Berkeley
Eddie Kohler, ICSI/ICIR, Berkeley
Jay Lepreau, University of Utah
Kathleen Nichols
Vern Paxson, ICSI/ICIR, Berkeley
Jennifer Rexford, AT&T Research
Luigi Rizzo, University of Pisa, Italy
Jim Roberts, CNET, France Telecom
Ralf Steinmetz, University of Darmstadt
Don Towsley, University of Massachusetts
Martina Zitterbart, University of Karlsruhe
FURTHER INFORMATION
Please look at
http://www.acm.org/sigcomm/sigcomm2003/workshop/mometools/
or contact
MoMeTools@tm.uka.de
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