*** Call for Papers ***

Heterogeneity in Computing Workshop (HCW) 2025
June 4, 2025            Milan, Italy            hcw-ipdps.org
===========================================

Most modern computing systems are heterogeneous, either for organic reasons 
because components grew independently, as it is the case in desktop grids, or 
by design to leverage the strength of specific hardware, as it is the case in 
accelerated systems. In any case, all computing systems have some form of 
hardware or software heterogeneity that must be managed, leveraged, understood, 
and exploited. The Heterogeneity in Computing Workshop (HCW) is a venue to 
discuss and innovate in all theoretical and practical aspects of heterogeneous 
computing: design, programmability, efficient utilization, algorithms, 
modeling, applications, etc. HCW 2025 will be the thirty-fourth annual 
gathering of this workshop.

HCW 2025 will be held in conjunction with the 39th IEEE International Parallel 
and Distributed Processing Symposium (ipdps.org). IEEE IPDPS 2025 is sponsored 
by the IEEE Computer Society through the Technical Committee on Parallel 
Processing (TCPP).

**** Topics ****
Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following areas:
- Heterogeneous multicore systems and architectures: Design, exploration, and 
experimental analysis of heterogeneous computing systems such as Graphics 
Processing Units, heterogeneous systems-on-chip, Artificial Intelligence chips, 
Field Programmable Gate Arrays, big.LITTLE, and application-specific 
architectures.
- Heterogeneous parallel and distributed systems: Design and analysis of 
computing grids, cloud systems, hybrid clusters, datacenters, geo-distributed 
computing systems, and supercomputers.
- Deep memory hierarchies: Design and analysis of memory hierarchies with SRAM, 
DRAM, Flash/SSD, and HDD technologies; NUMA architectures; cache coherence 
strategies; novel memory systems such as phase-change RAM, magnetic (e.g., STT) 
RAM, 3D Xpoint/crossbars, and memristors.
- On-chip, off-chip, and heterogeneous network architectures: Network-on-chip 
(NoC) architectures and protocols for heterogeneous multicore applications; 
energy, latency, reliability, and security optimizations for NoCs; off-chip 
(chip-to-chip) network architectures and optimizations; heterogeneous networks 
(combination of NoC and off-chip) design, evaluation, and optimizations; 
large-scale parallel and distributed heterogeneous network design, evaluation, 
and optimizations.
- Programming models and tools: Programming paradigms and tools for 
heterogeneous systems; middleware and runtime systems; performance-abstraction 
tradeoff; interoperability of heterogeneous software environments; workflows; 
dataflows.
- Resource management and algorithms for heterogeneous systems: Parallel 
algorithms for solving problems on heterogeneous systems (e.g., multicores, 
hybrid clusters, grids, or clouds); strategies for scheduling and allocation on 
heterogeneous 2D and 3D multicore architectures; static and dynamic scheduling 
and resource management for large-scale and parallel heterogeneous systems.
- Modeling, characterization, and optimizations: Performance models and their 
use in the design of parallel and distributed algorithms for heterogeneous 
platforms; characterizations and optimizations for improving the time to solve 
a problem (e.g., throughput, latency, runtime); modeling and optimizing 
electricity consumption (e.g., power, energy); modeling for failure management 
(e.g., fault tolerance, recovery, reliability); modeling for security in 
heterogeneous platforms.
- Applications on heterogeneous systems: Case studies; confluence of Big Data 
systems and heterogeneous systems; data-intensive computing; scientific 
computing.

This year we wish to focus on and expand submissions and presentations in the 
following "hot topics" areas; therefore, we especially invite submissions in 
the following four areas:
- Heterogeneous Integration of Quantum Computing: Design, exploration, and 
analysis of architectures and software frameworks enabling heterogeneous 
integration of classical computing and quantum computing (e.g., heterogeneous 
quantum computers, error correction, heterogeneous applications that use both 
classical and quantum logic, benchmarks for heterogeneous quantum computers).
- Heterogeneity and Interoperability in Software & Data Systems: Design, 
exploration, and analysis of architectures and software frameworks for 
interoperability in software and data systems (e.g., semantic frameworks, 
interoperability for heterogeneous Internet-of-Things systems, model-driven 
frameworks).
- Heterogeneous Computing for Machine Learning (ML) and Deep Learning (DL): 
Design, exploration, benchmarking, and analysis of accelerators and software 
frameworks for ML and DL applications on heterogeneous computing systems.
- Closing the loop on the design of heterogeneous compilers, runtimes, and 
hardware: As the needs of heterogeneous hardware apply pressure on runtime 
designers to adjust for the complexities of heterogeneous resource management, 
runtimes are now applying pressure back towards compiler designers to include 
all relevant information -- such as data flow and dependency analysis or 
hardware-specific representations of application tasks -- in their binaries to 
enable resource management policies to arbitrate effectively. Advancements in 
machine understanding of code are critical in enabling progress here with a 
holistic view of compilers, runtimes and heterogeneous hardware.

**** Important Dates ****
- Abstract submission (required): January 23, 2025
- Paper submission: January 30, 2025
- Author notification: February 20, 2025
- Camera-ready submission: March 6, 2025

**** Paper Submissions ****
Manuscripts submitted to HCW 2025 should not have been previously published or 
be under review for a different workshop, conference, or journal.

Submissions must use the latest IEEE manuscript templates for conference 
proceedings (http://ieee.org/conferences/publishing/templates.html). 
Submissions may not exceed a total of ten single-spaced double-column pages 
using 10-point size font on 8.5x11 inch pages. The page limit includes figures, 
tables, and references. A single-blind review process will be followed.

Files should be submitted by following the instructions at the IPDPS 2025 
submission site (http://ssl.linklings.net/conferences/ipdps).

New this year, we plan to recognize an outstanding HCW 2025 publication with a 
Best Paper Award. The Best Paper Award will be determined by taking into 
account the recommendations provided by the Technical Program Committee, along 
with detailed evaluations of the paper's originality, significance, and overall 
quality.

**** Workshop Organization ****

General Co-Chairs: DK Panda and Hari Subramoni, The Ohio State University, USA

Technical Program Committee Chair: Ali Akoglu, University of Arizona, USA

Questions may be sent to the HCW 2025 General Co-Chairs (DK Panda: panda.2 at 
osu dot edu, Hari Subramoni: subramoni.1 at osu dot edu) or Technical Program 
Committee Chair (Ali Akoglu: akoglu at arizona dot edu).

Technical Program Committee:
- Shashank Adavally, Micron Technology, USA
- Mohsen Amini Salehi, University of North Texas, USA
- Mehmet Belviranli, Colorado School of Mines, USA
- Gonzalo Brito Gadeschi, NVIDIA Corporation, Germany
- Nick Brown, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
- Daniel Cordeiro, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
- Matthias Diener, University of Illinois, USA
- Murali Emani, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
- Jiri Filipovic, Masaryk University, Czech Republic
- Abdou Guermouche, University of Bordeaux, France
- Yanfei Guo, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
- Diana Goehringer, Technical University Dresden, Germany
- Sahil Hassan, University of Arizona, USA
- Emmanuel Jeannot, INRIA, France
- Krishna Kavi, University of North Texas, USA
- Georgios Keramidas, Aristotle University, Greece
- Joongheon Kim, Korea University, Korea
- Joanna Kolodziej, Cracow University of Technology, Poland
- Alexey Lastovetsky, University College Dublin, Ireland
- Seyong Lee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
- Laercio Lima Pilla, CNRS, France
- Hatem Ltaief, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia
- Joshua Mack, Praetorian, USA 
- Joseph Manzano, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA
- Matthias Mueller, Aachen University, Germany
- Sridhar Radhakrishnan, University of Oklahoma, USA
- Jose Rufino, Polytechnic Institute of Braganca, Portugal
- Marco Domenico Santambrogio, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
- Aamir Shafi, The Ohio State University, USA
- Sameer Shende, University of Oregon; ParaTools, Inc., USA
- Achim Streit, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
- Shubbhi Taneja, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA
- Samuel Thibault, University of Bordeaux, France
- Claire Vishik, Intel, USA
- Logan Ward, Argonne National Laboratory, USA

Steering Committee:
- Kamesh Madduri, Pennsylvania State University, USA (Chair)
- Behrooz Shirazi, National Science Foundation, USA (Immediate Past Chair)
- H. J. Siegel, Colorado State University, USA (Past Chair)
- John Antonio, University of Oklahoma, USA
- David Bader, New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA
- Anne Benoit, ENS Lyon, France
- Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, USA
- Alexey Lastovetsky, University College Dublin, UK
- Sudeep Pasricha, Colorado State University, USA
- Viktor K. Prasanna, University of Southern California, USA
- Yves Robert, ENS Lyon, France
- Erik Saule, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA
- Uwe Schwiegelshohn, TU Dortmund University, Germany



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