[agents] SIMPLEX 2012: 4th Annual Workshop on Simplifying Complex Networks for Practitioners

Luck, Michael michael.luck at kcl.ac.uk
Mon Dec 12 09:43:48 EST 2011


[Apologies for multiple postings]

SIMPLEX 2012: 4th Annual Workshop on Simplifying Complex Networks for
Practitioners

17th April 2012, Lyon, France
http://www.simplexconf.net<http://www.simplexconf.net/> <http://www.simplexconf.net/>
Co-located with World Wide Web 2012 (WWW2012)

THEME
-----------------------
Network science, sometimes also called "complex networks science", has
recently attracted much attention from the scientific community, mainly
due to the almost ubiquitous presence of complex networks in real-world
systems. Examples of complex networks are found in living organisms, in
engineering systems, as well as in social networks. Most of the real-world
systems have the required degree of complexity to be called "complex
systems". Complexity may have to do with the intricate dynamics of the
interacting components, with the non-trivial properties of the underlying
network topology, or with the sheer size of the system itself.

Despite the numerous workshops and conferences related to network science,
it is still a set of loosely interacting communities. Those communities
would benefit from better interactions.

Simplex aims at triggering different computer science communities (e.g.
communication networks, distributed systems) to propose research areas and
topics that should be tackled from the network science perspective. We
also seek contributions from network science that are relevant to solve
practical computer science problems. Two types of contributions are
foreseen from prospective authors. The first type would consist of
use-cases of theoretical tools and methods to solve practical problems.
Such contributions should be as usable as possible by practitioners in the
related field. The second type of contributions would come from
practitioners that have identified a problem that may be solved by tools
from network sciences. The point of such contributions is to make the
network sciences community aware of the importance of a high-impact
problem, and to suggest means by which the problem may be solved by the
network science community. Both contributions should stimulate interaction
between theoreticians and practitioners, and also have high potential
impact in either field.

Topics for the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- Application of complex network theory to the design of web applications;
- Data mining of large scale networks;
- Analysis of dynamic and time-varying networks;
- Network robustness to failures and attacks;
- Machine learning and network science;
- Complex network theory applied to forwarding/routing problems
- Application of social network analysis to communication and computing
system design;
- Mobility and connectivity modelling;
- Network science and data & information retrieval;
- Complex network theory and security applications.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
---------------------
All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality,
significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. The
proceedings of the conference will be published by the ACM.

All paper submissions should follow the ACM Small Standard Format (up to 8
pages).

The paper submission site is located at: http://www.simplexconf.net/

IMPORTANT DATES
-----------------------
Paper Submission        3 February 2012
Authors Notification    24 February 2012
Camera-ready             5 March 2012
Workshop Date           17 April 2012

General Chairs
Pan Hui, Deutsche Telekom Laboratories/ TU Berlin, Germany
Steve Uhlig, Queen Mary University of London, UK

PC Chairs
Raul Mondragon, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Nishanth Sastry, King's College London, UK

Web Chair
Fehmi Ben Abdesslem, University of Cambridge, UK
Kaska Musial, King's College London, UK

Steering Committee
Jon Crowcroft, University of Cambridge, UK
Pan Hui, Deutsche Telekom Laboratories/ TU Berlin, Germany
Steve Uhlig, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Walter Willinger, AT&T Research, USA

Technical Program Committee
Alain Barrat, Centre de Physique Théorique, France
Vivek Borkar, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, India
Francesco Calabrese, IBM Research, Ireland
Richard Clegg, University College London, UK
Luciano da F. Costa, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
Vijay Erramilli, Telefonica Research, Spain
Renaud Lambiotte, Facultés Universitaires Notre-Dame de la Paix, Belgium
Sune Lehmann, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
Michael Luck, King's College London, UK
Mirco Musolesi, University of Birmingham, UK
Shishir Nagaraja, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, India
Arunabha Sen, Arizona State University, USA
Abhijit Sengupta, Unilever, UK
Michael Small, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, HK
Andras Telcs, Budapest University of Economic Sciences, Hungary
My Thai, University of Florida, USA
Shi Zhou, University College London, UK

--
Professor Michael Luck  | Head of Department
Department of Informatics  |  King's College London
Strand | London WC2R 2LS  |  United Kingdom
tel: +44 20 7848 2562    |  fax: +44 20 7848 2851
email: michael.luck at kcl.ac.uk<mailto:michael.luck at kcl.ac.uk>  |  web: http://www.inf.kcl.ac.uk/staff/mml



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