taylor@hplabsz.UUCP (11/28/87)
Title: International Symposium on Databases in
Parallel and Distributed Systems
Date: November 21-23, 1988
Location: Austin, Texas
Sponsor: IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on
Data Engineering & ACM Special Interest Group
on Computer Architecture (Approval Pending)
In cooperation with: IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on
Distributed Processing
General Chair: Joseph E. Urban, Univ. of Miami
Co-Program Chairs: Sushil Jajodia, NRL
Won Kim, MCC
Avi Silberschatz, UT-Austin
Pgm Committee: Rakesh Agrawal, AT&T Bell Labs.
Francois Bancilhon, INRIA
John Carlis, U of Minnesota
Doug DeGroot, TI
C. Ellis, Duke U
Shinya Fushimi, Japan
H. Garcia-Molina, Princeton U
Theo Haerder, Germany
Yahiko Kambayashi, Japan
Gerald Karam, Carleton Univ.
Roger King, U. of Colorado
Michael Kifer, SUNY-Stony Brook
Hank Korth, UT-Austin
Duncan Lawrie, U. of Illinois
Edward T. Lee, U of Miami
Eliot Moss, U of Mass.
Anil Nigam, IBM Yorktown Heights
N. Roussopoulos, U of Md
Sunil Sarin, CCA
Y. Sagiv, Hebrew Univ.
Ravi Krishnamurthy, MCC
Ralph F. Wachter, ONR
Jim Smith, ONR
Ouri Wolfson, Technion
Clement Yu, UI- Chicago
Stan Zdonik, Brown U
Local Arrangement: Hong-Tai Chou
Publicity: Ahmed K. Elmagarmid, Penn State
Finance Chairman: Edward T. Lee, University of Miami
Purpose:
The objective of this symposium is to provide a forum for database
researchers and practitioners to increase their awareness of the impacts
on data models and database system architecture
of the parallel and distributed systems and new programming paradigms
designed for parallelism.
A number of general-purpose parallel computers
are now commercially available, and to better exploit their
capabilities,
a number of programming languages are currently being designed
based on the logic, functional, and/or object-oriented paradigm.
Further, research into homogeneous distributed databases has matured,
and resulted in a number of commercial distributed
database systems recently announced.
However, there are still major open research issues in heterogeneous
distributed databases; the impacts of the new programming paradigms on
data models and database system architecture are not well understood;
and considerable research remains to exploit the capabilities of
parallel computing systems for database applications.
We invite authors to submit original technical papers describing recent
and novel research or engineering developments in all areas relevant to
the theme of this symposium. Topics include, but are not limited to,
o Parallelism in data-intensive applications,
both traditional (such as Transaction Processing)
and non-traditional (such as Knowledge-Based)
o Parallel computer architectures for database applications
o Concurrent programming languages
o Database issues in integrating database technology
with the logic, functional, or object-oriented paradigm
o Performance, consistency, and architecture aspects of
distributed databases
SYMPOSIUM TIMETABLE AND INFORMATION:
Papers due: June 1, 1988
Notice of Acceptance: August 1, 1988
Camera-ready copy due: September 1, 1988
PAPER SUBMISSION:
The length of each paper should be limited to 25 double-spaced typed
pages (or about 5000 words). Four copies of complete papers should be
sent before June 1, 1988 to
Sushil Jajodia
Naval Research Laboratory
Washington, D.C. 20375-5000
(202) 767-3596
jajodia@nrl-css.arpa
- -