[fg-arc] CFP: SAM 2014 - 1st Int. Workshop on Software Architecture Metrics at WICSA 2014 in Sydney
Heiko Koziolek
koziolek at ipd.uka.de
Mon Oct 28 09:08:04 CET 2013
Call for Papers
First International Workshop on Software Architecture Metrics (SAM)
in conjunction with WICSA 2014, Sydney, Australia
http://www.sei.cmu.edu/community/sam2014/
Architecting complex software systems faces the challenge of how best
to assess the achievement of quality attributes and other key drivers,
how to reveal issues and risks early, and how to make decisions on
architecture improvement. Software architecture quality has a large
impact on this effort but is usually not assessed with quantitative
measures. As the pace of software delivery and technology churn
increases, organizations need guidance on how to meet business goals
(e.g., time to market, cost, productivity, quality) of their software.
There is an increasing need to provide ongoing insights into the
quality of the system being developed. Additionally, it is highly
desirable to accelerate the feedback loop between development and
deployment through measurable means for intrinsic quality, value, and
cost, and how they vary over time. There is also increasing attention
to other fields (such as software analytics as well as empirical
software engineering and measurement) that can provide the theory,
tooling, or inspiration to develop measurement and analysis frameworks
for software architecture. The software engineering community has an
opportunity to improve the way architecture is measured reliably,
consistently, and with repeatable results.
The goal of this workshop is to discuss progress on architecture
metrics, measurement, and analysis; to gather empirical evidence on
the use and effectiveness of metrics; and to identify priorities for a
research agenda. The workshop addresses both academic researchers and
industrial practitioners for an exchange of ideas and collaboration.
We are seeking papers on practical experiences and research approaches
to evaluate and manage architecture through metrics including, but not
limited to, the following topics:
* Proposing and validating new metrics
o architecture quality, value, cost, and uncertainty
o architecture properties: understandability, maintainability,
evolvability, concern dispersion, and modularization
o architecture models and views: completeness, consistency, and
violation of reference models or patterns
o traceability: the connection between architecture and other
artifacts, such as requirements and code
o architecture knowledge and decision models: confidence,
completeness, relevance, and coverage
* Creating and validating tools and techniques
o eliciting and visualizing architecture metrics
o composing architecture metrics by aggregating or combining
code-level metrics
o associating multiple views and quality concerns with metrics
* Using architecture metrics
o application to software evolution, maintenance, refactoring, or
software aging
o analytics on software architecture data for managers and
software engineers to make better decisions
o support for project management with data such as velocity, scrap
and rework rates, and uncertainty
o use by product management for the software business case
o input to economic models: technical debt management, real option
analysis, and valuation
* Principles and practices
o Creating principles for industrial software architecture metrics
o Executing empirical studies on how architecture metrics are used
in practice and their effectiveness
We invite submissions of papers in any areas related to the themes and
goals of the workshop in the following categories:
1. research papers - describing innovative and significant original
research in the field (8 pages)
2. industrial papers - describing industrial experience, case studies,
challenges, problems, and solutions (4-8 pages)
3. position and future-trend papers - describing ongoing research, new
results, and future trends (4 pages)
Papers must conform to the ACM proceedings format
(http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/proceedings-templates). Papers
must be original and not under consideration for publication
elsewhere. All submissions will be reviewed by members of the program
committee for quality and relevance. Accepted papers will become part
of the workshop proceedings and published in the WICSA companion
proceedings. Submit your paper electronically via EasyChair
(https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sam2014).
Important dates:
Submission: January 12, 2014
Final camera-ready copy: February 10, 2014
Notification of acceptance: January 27, 2014
Workshop: April 7, 2014
Organizers:
Paris Avgeriou, University of Groningen
Heiko Koziolek, ABB Corporate Research
Robert L. Nord, Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute
Ipek Ozkaya, Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute
Program Committee:
Pierre America, Philips Research, NL
Steffen Becker, University of Paderborn, DE
Eric Bouwers, Technical University Delft, NL
Yuangfang Cai, Drexel University, US
Jane Cleland-Huang, DePaul University, US
Neil Ernst, Software Engineering Institute, US
Rich Hilliard, Consulting Software Systems Architect, US
Oliver Hummel, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, DE
Anton Jansen, ABB, SE
Rainer Koschke, University of Bremen, DE
Philippe Kruchten, University of British Columbia, CA
Tim Menzies, West Virginia University, US
Matthias Naab, Fraunhofer IESE, DE
Oscar Pastor, Valencia University of Technology, ES
Neeraj Sangal, Lattix, US
Jean-Guy Schneider, Swinburne University of Technology, AU
Carolyn Seaman, University of Maryland Baltimore County, US
Bran Selic, Malina Software Corp., CA
Will Snipes, ABB, US
Michael Stal, Siemens, DE
Robert Stoddard, Software Engineering Institute, US
Uwe Zdun, University of Vienna, AT
Liming Zhu, National ICT Australia, AU
Olaf Zimmermann, University of Applied Sciences, CH
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