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HotSoS 2014 : 2014 Symposium and Bootcamp on the Science of Security | |||||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.csc2.ncsu.edu/conferences/hotsos | |||||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||||
NEW EXTENDED DEADLINES — 2014 Symposium and Bootcamp on the Science of Security (HotSoS)
April 8-9, 2014, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States Wesbite: http://www.csc2.ncsu.edu/conferences/hotsos Additional Background: http://cps-vo.org/group/SoS *** SYMPOSIUM OVERVIEW *** Hot SoS is a research event centered on the Science of Security (SoS). The key motivation behind developing a Science of Security is to address in a principled manner the fundamental problems of security. Security has been intensively studied, however, previous research has often emphasized the engineering of specific solutions and attacks without developing the scientific understanding of the problem domain. All too often, security research focuses on responding to specific threats in an apparently ad hoc manner. The motivation behind the nascent Science of Security is to understand how computing systems are architected, built, used, and maintained with a view to understanding and addressing security challenges systematically across their life cycle. In particular, two features distinguish the Science of Security from other research programs on security: scope and approach. * Scope. The Science of Security considers not just computational artifacts, but incorporates the human, social, and organizational aspects of computing within its purview. * Approach. The Science of Security takes a decidedly scientific approach, based on the understanding of empirical evaluation and theoretical foundations as developed in the natural and social sciences, but adapted as appropriate for the artificial science (in Herb Simon's term) that is computing. Following a successful invitational SoS Community Meeting in December 2012, Hot SoS 2014 will be the first open research event in what is expected to be a continuing series. Submissions to the symposium will be peer-reviewed and indexed in the IEEE Digital Library. Thanks to support from our sponsors, travel scholarships will be available for students, with a preference for student authors. *** TOPICS OF INTEREST *** We welcome submissions on all topics relevant to the theme of Science of Security including, but not limited to, the following (each from the perspective of the Science of Security): * Computing architectures * Networks * Software engineering practices * Models of human interaction and behavior * Organizational models * Evaluation methodologies If you have any questions about the topics or submission instructions, please contact the Program Chairs, Professors David M. Nicol and Munindar P. Singh, at hotsos14@gmail.com *** IMPORTANT DATES *** Abstracts: December 4, 2013 (EXTENDED) Submissions: December 11, 2013 (EXTENDED) First round of reviews: January 10, 2014 Author responses: January 15, 2014 Decisions: February 1, 2014 Final versions of accepted submissions: March 1, 2014 Conference: April 8-9, 2014 To encourage participation, registration fees will be kept low thanks for support from our sponsors. *** SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS *** Submissions must be formatted in the IEEE Conference Proceedings format and be no more than 10 pages long with an additional 2 pages for references to yield a total of 12 pages maximum. Submissions must be prepared for double-blind review, that is, removing the authors names and any explicit indicators of the authors' identities, such as removing past publications identified in the paper as "our work" or "we showed". http://www.ieee.org/conferences_events/conferences/publishing/templates.html Submissions must not be previously published or accepted for publication and must not be submitted for publication elsewhere between the Hot SoS submission and decision dates. Prior or concurrent submission to workshops without a proceedings might be acceptable, if disclosed at the time of submission. Submit your manuscript using Easy Chair: https://www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?conf=hotsos2014 *** ORGANIZATION *** General Chair: Laurie A. Williams, North Carolina State University Program Co-Chairs: David M. Nicol, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Munindar P. Singh, North Carolina State University Program Committee: Gul Agha, University of Illinois Ehab Al-Shaer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte Bo An, Nanyang Technological University Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University Jean Camp, Indiana University Amit Chopra, Lancaster University Jedidiah Crandall, University of New Mexico Fabiano Dalpiaz, Utrecht University Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon University Scott DeLoach, Kansas State University Will Enck, North Carolina State University Rino Falcone, ISTC-CNR David Garlan, Carnegie Mellon University Dieter Gollmann, TU Hamburg-Harburg Mark Greaves, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Xiaohui Gu, North Carolina State University Somesh Jha, University of Wisconsin Christopher Kiekintveld, University of Texas at El Paso Karl Levitt, UC Davis Ninghui Li, Purdue University Emil Lupu, Imperial College William Martin, U.S. Department of Defense Christopher Mayhorn, North Carolina State University Ian Molloy, IBM Research Emerson Murphy-Hill, North Carolina State University Tim Norman, University of Aberdeen Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen Simon Parsons, University of Liverpool Wolter Pieters, Delft University of Technology Robert Proctor, Purdue University Angela Sasse, University College London Greg Shannon, CERT/SEI Kevin Sullivan, University of Virginia Wamberto Vasconcelos, University of Aberdeen Serena Villata, INRIA Sophia Antipolis Claire Vishik, Intel Tara Whalen, Carlton University Rebecca Wright, Rutgers University |
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