{"title":"2018年ACM分布式计算原理研讨会论文集","authors":"George Giakkoupis","doi":"10.1145/3212734","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"It is our great pleasure to welcome you to the 35th ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC 2016). This year's symposium continues its tradition of being the premier forum for presentation of research on all aspects of distributed computing, including the theory, design, implementation and applications of distributed algorithms, systems and networks. During the years, PODC has been the stage where many landmark results have been presented that have increased our understanding of this exciting and fundamental research endeavor. In the best tradition of theoretical discovery, the insights that have been provided have not only elucidated fundamental conceptual issues but also found their way into the real world of systems and applications. \n \nThe call for papers attracted 137 regular submissions and 12 brief announcement submissions. The Program Committee accepted 40 regular papers and 24 brief announcements (some of which come from the regular submissions that could not be accepted due to lack of space) that cover a wide variety of topics. Every submitted paper was read and evaluated by at least three reviewers. The final decisions regarding acceptance or rejection of each paper were made through electronic Program Committee discussions held during April 2016. Revised and expanded versions of a few selected papers will be considered for publication in a special issue of the journal Distributed Computing and in the Journal of the ACM. \n \nThe Program Committee selected the paper Analysing Snapshot Isolation, by Andrea Cerone and Alexey Gotsman, for this year's Best Paper Award. Moreover, the Program Committee decided to split the Best Student Paper Award between two papers: A Distributed (2+e)-Approximation for Vertex Cover in O(logΔ/eloglogΔ) Rounds, by Reuven Bar-Yehuda, Keren Censor-Hillel and Gregory Schwartzman, and The Greedy Spanner is Existentially Optimal, by Arnold Filtser and Shay Solomon. Three keynote talks will be given by Andrew A. Chien, Faith Ellen, and Phillip B. Gibbons. \n \nThe 2016 Edsger W. Dijkstra Prize in Distributed Computing was split between two papers: A Fast and Simple Randomized Parallel Algorithm for the Maximal Independent Set Problem, by Noga Alon, Laszlo Babai, and Alon Itai (published in the Journal of Algorithms 1986), and A Simple Parallel Algorithm for the Maximal Independent Set Problem by Michael Luby (published at STOC 1985 and in SIAM Journal on Computing 1986). The Prize will be presented at the conference. Finally, this year we will celebrate the 60th birthday of Faith Ellen.","PeriodicalId":198284,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the 2018 ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-07-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Proceedings of the 2018 ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing\",\"authors\":\"George Giakkoupis\",\"doi\":\"10.1145/3212734\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"It is our great pleasure to welcome you to the 35th ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC 2016). This year's symposium continues its tradition of being the premier forum for presentation of research on all aspects of distributed computing, including the theory, design, implementation and applications of distributed algorithms, systems and networks. During the years, PODC has been the stage where many landmark results have been presented that have increased our understanding of this exciting and fundamental research endeavor. In the best tradition of theoretical discovery, the insights that have been provided have not only elucidated fundamental conceptual issues but also found their way into the real world of systems and applications. \\n \\nThe call for papers attracted 137 regular submissions and 12 brief announcement submissions. The Program Committee accepted 40 regular papers and 24 brief announcements (some of which come from the regular submissions that could not be accepted due to lack of space) that cover a wide variety of topics. Every submitted paper was read and evaluated by at least three reviewers. The final decisions regarding acceptance or rejection of each paper were made through electronic Program Committee discussions held during April 2016. 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引用次数: 9
摘要
我们非常高兴地欢迎您参加第35届ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS分布式计算原理研讨会(PODC 2016)。今年的研讨会延续了它作为分布式计算各个方面研究的主要论坛的传统,包括分布式算法、系统和网络的理论、设计、实现和应用。多年来,PODC已经提出了许多具有里程碑意义的成果,这些成果增加了我们对这一令人兴奋的基础研究努力的理解。在理论发现的最佳传统中,所提供的见解不仅阐明了基本的概念问题,而且还找到了进入系统和应用的现实世界的方法。本次论文征集共收到137份定期投稿和12份简短公告投稿。计划委员会接受了40篇常规论文和24篇简短的公告(其中一些来自由于篇幅不足而无法接受的常规提交),涵盖了广泛的主题。每篇提交的论文都由至少三位审稿人阅读和评估。关于每篇论文的接受或拒绝的最终决定是通过2016年4月举行的电子项目委员会讨论做出的。将考虑在《分布式计算》杂志的特刊和《美国计算机协会杂志》上发表几篇选定论文的修订和扩展版本。项目委员会选择了Andrea Cerone和Alexey Gotsman的论文《分析快照隔离》获得今年的最佳论文奖。此外,项目委员会决定将最佳学生论文奖分配给两篇论文:由Reuven Bar-Yehuda, Keren Censor-Hillel和Gregory Schwartzman撰写的O(logΔ/eloglogΔ)轮顶点覆盖的分布式(2+e)逼近,以及由Arnold Filtser和Shay Solomon撰写的贪婪的Spanner是存在最优的。Andrew A. Chien, Faith Ellen和Phillip B. Gibbons将做三个主题演讲。2016年Edsger W. Dijkstra分布式计算奖分为两篇论文:Noga Alon, Laszlo Babai和Alon Itai的最大独立集问题的快速简单随机并行算法(发表在1986年的算法杂志上),以及Michael Luby的最大独立集问题的简单并行算法(发表在STOC 1985和SIAM Journal on Computing 1986)。该奖项将在会议上颁发。最后,今年我们将庆祝Faith Ellen的60岁生日。
Proceedings of the 2018 ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing
It is our great pleasure to welcome you to the 35th ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC 2016). This year's symposium continues its tradition of being the premier forum for presentation of research on all aspects of distributed computing, including the theory, design, implementation and applications of distributed algorithms, systems and networks. During the years, PODC has been the stage where many landmark results have been presented that have increased our understanding of this exciting and fundamental research endeavor. In the best tradition of theoretical discovery, the insights that have been provided have not only elucidated fundamental conceptual issues but also found their way into the real world of systems and applications.
The call for papers attracted 137 regular submissions and 12 brief announcement submissions. The Program Committee accepted 40 regular papers and 24 brief announcements (some of which come from the regular submissions that could not be accepted due to lack of space) that cover a wide variety of topics. Every submitted paper was read and evaluated by at least three reviewers. The final decisions regarding acceptance or rejection of each paper were made through electronic Program Committee discussions held during April 2016. Revised and expanded versions of a few selected papers will be considered for publication in a special issue of the journal Distributed Computing and in the Journal of the ACM.
The Program Committee selected the paper Analysing Snapshot Isolation, by Andrea Cerone and Alexey Gotsman, for this year's Best Paper Award. Moreover, the Program Committee decided to split the Best Student Paper Award between two papers: A Distributed (2+e)-Approximation for Vertex Cover in O(logΔ/eloglogΔ) Rounds, by Reuven Bar-Yehuda, Keren Censor-Hillel and Gregory Schwartzman, and The Greedy Spanner is Existentially Optimal, by Arnold Filtser and Shay Solomon. Three keynote talks will be given by Andrew A. Chien, Faith Ellen, and Phillip B. Gibbons.
The 2016 Edsger W. Dijkstra Prize in Distributed Computing was split between two papers: A Fast and Simple Randomized Parallel Algorithm for the Maximal Independent Set Problem, by Noga Alon, Laszlo Babai, and Alon Itai (published in the Journal of Algorithms 1986), and A Simple Parallel Algorithm for the Maximal Independent Set Problem by Michael Luby (published at STOC 1985 and in SIAM Journal on Computing 1986). The Prize will be presented at the conference. Finally, this year we will celebrate the 60th birthday of Faith Ellen.