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Call for Papers

IEEE Netsoft 2023 PhD Symposium

in conjunction with IEEE NetSoft 2023<https://netsoft2023.ieee-netsoft.org/>
19-23 June 2023
Madrid, Spain
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Objectives

The spirit of the PhD symposium is to offer an opportunity for students, 
currently performing a PhD in the scientific scope of the Netsoft conference, 
as specified in the call for papers, to present the advancement of their 
research work and collect tailored feedback from experts of the Netsoft 
community. As such, expected submissions must be issued by ongoing or very 
recently defended PhD students. The PhD symposium clearly expects submissions 
which summarize the PhD scientific activities at a given advancement stage. As 
such, they must not overlap with traditional scientific papers presented as 
long or short papers in conferences and workshops.

Since the relevant scientific aspects evolve according to a PhD advancement, 
two types of submissions are considered in the PhD symposium, as described  
below.

Early Stage PhD

Expected contribution: Early stage PhD submissions are welcome with papers 
describing the general context of the PhD activity and the locks it aims at 
eventually overcoming. A synthetic but comprehensive state of the art of the 
field must be provided and the limits of current scientific contributions must 
be especially emphasized so that to formulate one or a few research questions 
which form the core of the PhD problem statement. Finally, the selected 
research methodology and some early ideas, even neither implemented nor 
validated, can be exposed. Finally, a general view of the work lying ahead has 
to be provided too.

Eligibility: The Early Stage paper format is dedicated to the 1st year PhD 
students or early 2nd year PhD students who are starting to elaborate their 
first research contributions.

Paper format: Submitted papers should not exceed four (4) pages in length, 
including references.

Late Stage PhD

Expected contribution: Late Stage submissions aim at providing an overview of 
the accomplished PhD work from a methodological perspective. More specifically, 
it must provide an up-to-date state of the art that pinpoints some limits 
motivating the contribution further exposed. Then, the current status of the 
research work with a particular emphasis on the selected methodology is 
expected and a comparison with the state of the art can be provided when 
relevant and achievable. Finally, according to the PhD advancement, the planned 
or implemented evaluation methodology and to what extent the latter supports 
reproducibility of research (sharing data sets, codes, etc.) have to be 
exposed. For PhD students who have already graduated, the PhD outcomes and the 
way they push forward the initial limits, as well as their current limits, is 
particularly expected.

Please note that late stage submissions must not overlap with standard 
scientific papers focused on a standalone scientific contribution as presented 
in long or short papers of conferences and workshops, such as Netsoft and 
beyond.

Eligibility: Late Stage submissions target ending PhD students or those who 
recently graduated, which is roughly from the beginning of the PhD manuscript 
writing up to 6 months after the defense. The Late Stage format is also open to 
ongoing PhD (i.e. 2nd year) if the submitted content satisfies with the 
expectations exposed above.

Paper format: Submitted papers should not exceed six (6) pages in length, 
including references.

General Eligibility

As PhD symposium differs from standard scientific tracks, and solely targets 
ongoing or very recently defended PhD, some eligibility assessment must be 
satisfied for submissions to be considered:
●     The list of authors is restricted to the PhD student and the supervisor. 
In the case where more than one advisor is involved in the PhD, thus leading to 
several authors in addition to the PhD student, the PhD symposium chairs must 
be informed and any official assessment must be provided.
●     PhD students of accepted PhD symposium papers must register to Netsoft 
2023 and they are the sole person able to present their work during the event.
●     An official letter from the PhD advisor(s) is required to state the PhD 
status (beginning for Early Stage, ending with PhD defense date (expected or 
achieved) for Late Stage).

General Submission Guidelines

Two tracks are available for submission: one for Early Stage PhD submissions, 
and one for Late Stage PhD submissions. In both tracks, PhD students have to 
submit two files: the manuscript and the letter of their supervisor to prove 
their status as a PhD student. Manuscripts must be written in English and 
formatted according to the standard IEEE double-column conference template 
(10-point font). Templates and examples in LaTeX and Microsoft Word are 
available for download at:
https://www.ieee.org/conferences/publishing/templates.html.

Papers not matching the length and formatting requirements or violating IEEE’s 
guidelines on plagiarized content will be rejected without review. All other 
submitted papers will be reviewed. Only PDF files will be accepted for the 
review process and all manuscripts must be electronically submitted through 
EDAS using the following link: https://edas.info/N30396.
Accepted submissions are published in the conference proceedings and submitted 
to the IEEE Xplore Digital Library, provided that they are duly presented.

Topics of Interest

The symposium solicits submissions in the same field of the main conference. 
The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

●     Softwarized cloud, fog, and edge infrastructures
●     Network softwarization for 5G/6G
●     Softwarization in Metaverse (AR/VR and digital twins)
●     Cooperative multi-domain, multi-tenant SDN/NFV environments.
●     Future Internet and New IP architectures.
●     Mobility management in softwarized networks.
●     High-precision communications and computing
●     Service Function Chaining (SFC).
●     Network slicing and slice management
●     QoS and QoE in softwarized infrastructures.
●     Network softwarization for deterministic Internet re-engineering
●     Softwarization for Cognitive and autonomic networking
●     Policy-based and Intent-based networking.
●     AI/ML techniques and network softwarization
●     Dynamic resource discovery and negotiation schemes.
●     Assurance and Measurements in softwarized networks
●     Resilience, reliability, and robustness of softwarized networks
●     Security, Safety, Trust, and Privacy in virtualized environments.
●     Energy Efficiency in network softwarization
●     Abstractions and virtualization of resources, services, and functions.
●     Programmability for Time-Sensitive Networks (TSN)
●     Programmable Networking Protocols
●     Programmable SDN and NFV: languages and architectures (P4 and others)
●     Open source and network softwarization.
●     Hardware acceleration for programmable network functions.
●     Development methodologies for network softwarization (DevOps, NetOps, 
verification).
●     Deployment and transition strategies.
●     Experience reports from experimental testbeds and deployments.
●     New value chains and service models enabled by softwarization.
●     Socio-economic impact and regulations for softwarization.

Important Dates
Submission deadline (Extended - FIRM): March 31, 2023
Notification date: April 14, 2023
Camera ready: April 28, 2023

Contact:  PhD Symposium co-Chairs
Guillaume Doyen, IMT Atlantique, France (guillaume.do...@imt-atlantique.fr)
Giovanni Schembra, University of Catania, Italy (giovanni.schem...@unict.it)

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