Eighth International Workshop on Practical Applications of Stochastic Modelling

PASM'16

5th April 2016

Münster, Germany

(collocated with MMB and DFT 2016)

Scope of Workshop

We encourage papers which apply current well-developed formalisms (stochastic Petri nets, stochastic process algebras, layered queueing networks, etc) to real-world case-studies. These studies might be of traditional web-service, Grid or computer architectures but also we strongly encourage studies from inter-disciplinary collaborations, such as biological and physical systems.

The common link is to see how researchers from diverse fields have overcome the problem of modelling large concurrent and stochastic communicating systems to obtain the particular style of stochastic metric that is important to their field.

Successful contributions may have demonstrated some novel theoretic advance to model their system or will have been diligent in constructing a detailed and realistic stochastic or probabilistic model and carried the modelling through to the analysis phase. Extra credit will be given for models which are backed up by experiment or simulation.

The aim is to end up with a collection of papers which could be used as outstanding examples of modelling practice in the field of stochastic modelling and exhibit all phases of the modelling lifecycle.


Some suggested topics on which we would encourage submission, are listed below. This is by no means an exhaustive list and any paper in the general area of the conference scope would be warmly welcomed.

  • Case-study analysis using stochastic paradigms and novel analytic variations on those paradigms to enable better practical analysis, e.g.:
    • stochastic process algebras
    • stochastic Petri nets
    • layered queueing networks
    • stochastic automata networks
    • queueing networks
    • fluid stochastic Petri nets
    • stochastic ambient calculus
  • Specific interdisciplinary topics that we would be particularly interested to hear from include application of systematic probabilistic or stochastic analysis techniques to, for instance:
    • biological/epidemiological models
    • models of computer virus/worm infection
    • spatial modelling of chemical/nuclear reactions
    • decision making, planning and scheduling
    • geophysical models of large dynamical systems: e.g. weather/ocean systems, lava flows
  • Stochastic and probabilistic models from computing areas such as:
    • power consumption/conservation
    • computer security
    • cloud computing
    • distributed and fault-tolerant systems
    • adhoc wireless communication systems
    • embedded systems
    • safety-critical systems
    • cyber-physical systems
    • smart cities
    • performance analysis of massively parallel architectures
  • Methods for the solution of practical large-scale problems, for instance:
    • Parallel and distributed solution of Markov chains
    • Performance analysis using GPU-accelerated architectures
    • Fluid approximations
    • Mean field analysis
    • Stochastic simulation
    • Product form solution
    • MTBDD based methods
    • State space reduction

Important dates

  • Paper submission deadline: Monday 11th January 2016
  • Notification to authors: Monday 8th February 2016
  • Camera-ready deadline: Friday 11th March 2016 (HARD DEADLINE)
  • Workshop: Tuesday 5th April 2016
  • CRC deadline for ENTCS proceedings: Friday 6th May 2016

Publication

The proceedings of PASM'16 will appear as an issue of Elsevier's ENTCS (Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science). This will appear after the workshop. Delegates at the workshop will be given an informal proceedings for the event.

Instructions to authors

Electronic paper submission will be available through Easy Chair.

Papers should be original work of between 15 and 20 pages long, including figures and bibliography, and in single-column format. Submission is required in PDF format. Word files cannot be accepted. Please follow the manuscript preparation guidelines on the ENTCS web page.

Programme Committee

  • Nigel Thomas, Newcastle University
  • Marco Gribaudo, Politecnico di Milano
  • Katja Gilly, Miguel Hernandez University
  • Avelino Zorzo, PUCRS
  • Mirco Tribastone, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca
  • Andrea Marin, University of Venice
  • Jeremy Bryans, Centre for Mobility and Transport, Coventry University
  • Stephen Gilmore, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
  • Soraya Zertal, Universite de Versailles Saint-Quentin
  • David Parker, University of Birmingham
  • Markus Siegle, Uni Bw Munich
  • Kalyan Perumalla, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Tadeusz Czachorski, IITiS PAN, Polish Academy of Sciences
  • Helen Karatza, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
  • William Knottenbelt, Imperial College London
  • Sabine Wittevrongel, Ghent University
  • John Murphy, University College Dublin
  • Paulo Fernandes, PUCRS
  • Leila Kloul, Universite de Versailles
  • Paolo Zuliani, Newcastle University
  • Katinka Wolter, Freie Universitaet zu Berlin
  • Philipp Reinecke, Freie Universität Berlin
  • David Daly, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
  • Samuel Kounev, University of Wuerzburg
  • Natarajan Gautam, Texas A&M University
  • Andras Horvath, University of Turin
  • Miklos Telek, Budapest University of Technology and Economics
  • Andrea Vandin, IMT Institute for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy
  • Peter Harrison, Imperial College London

Workshop organisers


William Knottenbelt
Imperial College London
 
Nigel Thomas,
Newcastle University
 
 

Send comments and questions to Nigel Thomas Last updated on 9th October 2015