Submission Formats
Minisymposia
A minisymposium generally consists of four 25-minute presentations, with an additional five minutes for discussion after each presentation. To ensure balance, SIAM prefers a single individual not be the organizer or co-organizer of more than one minisymposium, however, organizers can submit up to three (3) parts per minisymposium, allowing up to twelve (12) speakers. In addition, SIAM discourages minisymposia in which most of the speakers or co-authors come from the same institution.
A minisymposium comprised of multiple parts (up to 3) will be counted as a SINGLE minisymposium.
SIAM also requests speakers submit only one oral presentation, either a minisymposium presentation or contributed lecture. Minisymposium session organizers and individual speakers are equally responsible for ensuring participants adhere to the one talk per person rule.
It is recommended the first speaker provide an overview of the topic area. Each minisymposium speaker should submit an abstract no longer than 1,500 characters, including spaces. The organizing committee will referee minisymposium proposals. The number of minisymposia may be limited to retain an acceptable level of parallelism in sessions.
Please visit the Guidelines for Preparing a Minisymposium Proposal.
SIAM requires minisymposium organizers propose sessions with a minimum of three (3) confirmed speakers by the minisymposium submission deadline. Sessions submitted with a majority of speakers listed as “TBD/TBA,” or using placeholders, risk immediate rejection.
Prospective minisymposium organizers must submit a proposal consisting of a title, a description (not to exceed 1,500 characters, including spaces), a list of speakers, and presentation titles using the Conference Management System.
Deadline for submission of minisymposium proposals: August 24, 2021 Extended to September 14, 2021 (11:59 p.m. AoE)
Deadline for submission of minisymposium speaker abstracts: September 14, 2021 (11:59 p.m. AoE) Extended to September 28, 2021 (11:59 p.m. AoE)
Contributed Presentations in Lecture or Poster Format
Contributed presentations in lecture or poster format are invited in all areas consistent with the conference themes. A lecture format is generally a 15-minute oral presentation with an additional five (5) minutes for discussion. Talk lengths will be determined by the co-chairs at the close of submissions.
SIAM also requests speakers submit only one oral presentation, either a minisymposium presentation or contributed lecture.
A poster format involves the use of non-electronic visual aids for mounting on a 4’ x 8’ poster board. A poster session is two hours long. Each contributor, either for a lecture or a poster, must submit a title and a brief abstract not to exceed 1,500 characters, including spaces.
A poster may be presented in addition to a talk, provided the talk and the poster are on different topics.
Please submit contributed presentations in lecture or poster format using the Conference Management System.
Deadline for submission of contributed abstracts: September 14, 2021 (11:59 p.m. AoE) Extended to September 28, 2021 (11:59 p.m. AoE)
Proceedings
The SIAM Conference on Parallel Processing for Scientific Computing (SIAM PP22) and the SIAM Activity Group on Supercomputing (SIAG-SC) invite research paper submissions on parallel algorithms, scalable scientific computing, simulation, visualization, and machine learning. The SIAM PP conference series focuses on the design of numerical and discrete algorithms in the context of modern parallel computer architectures, covering both theory and practice.
Included Themes
- Compilers and programming systems
- Data analysis and visualization
- Education in HPC
- Fault-tolerance
- Large-scale parallel applications
- Parallel computer systems
- Performance analysis, tuning, and debugging
- Reproducibility
- Scalable parallel algorithms
- Scientific workflows
Special Themes
- Algorithms and applications on multiphysics and multiscale computing
- Frontiers of scientific computing
- Integration of scientific computing and machine learning methods
- Post Moore systems and algorithms
- Verification, validation, and uncertainty quantification
The research papers will be peer-reviewed. We will use a rigorous academic peer-review process and single-blind reviewing. The reviewers will also nominate papers for best paper and best student paper, and the winners will be finalized during the conference.
Accepted papers will be published in the Proceedings of the SIAM Conference on Parallel Processing for Scientific Computing Conference, will be DOI indexed, and will be accessible through the SIAM proceedings web site. Integration of these papers into the SIAM PP series conference program would be in addition to the standard minisymposia and contributed talks.
Submission format: 10 pages without references. Supplementary material will be allowed.
Deadlines:
Papers due: October 1, 2021
Decisions: Mid November, 2021
Camera-ready copy due: Mid December, 2021
Steering Committee:
George Biros, University of Texas, Austin, U.S.
Matthias Bolten, Universität Wuppertal, Germany
Olaf Schenk, Università della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland
Richard Vuduc, Georgia Institute of Technology, U.S.
Ulrike M. Yang, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, U.S.
Proceedings Paper Committee:
Hartwig Anzt, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Prasana Balaprakash, Argonne National Laboratory, U.S.
Grey Ballard, Wake Forest University, U.S.
Costas Bekas, Citadel Securities, Switzerland
Luc Berger-Vergiat, Sandia National Laboratories, U.S.
Paolo Bientinesi, Umeå University, Sweden
George Bosilca, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, U.S.
Eric de Sturler, Virginia Tech, U.S.
Edoardo Di Napoli, Jülich Supercomputing Center, Germany
Anshu Dubey, Argonne National Laboratory, U.S.
David Gardner, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, U.S.
Laura Grigori, INRIA Paris, France
Jeff Hammond, NVIDIA, U.S.
Hartmut Kaiser, Louisiana State University, U.S.
Scott Klasky, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S.
Alicia Klinvex, Naval Nuclear Laboratory, U.S.
Jiajia Li, College of William and Mary, U.S.
Weifeng Liu, The China University of Petroleum, China
Yang Liu, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.
Hatem Ltaief, KAUST, Saudi Arabia
Karla Morris, Sandia National Laboratories, U.S.
Sivasankaran Rajamanickam, Sandia National Laboratories, U.S.
Amanda Randles, Duke University, U.S.
Damian Rouson, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.
Tetsuya Sakurai, University of Tsukuba, Japan
John Shalf, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.
Stanmire Tomov, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, U.S.
Bora Uçar, ENS Lyon, France
Rich Vuduc, Georgia Institute of Technology, U.S.
Chao Yang, Peking University, China
Stefano Zampini, KAUST, Saudi Arabia
Submission Site (EasyChair)
LaTeX style and sample files for SIAM proceedings are available here: SIAMproceedings_060921.zip (LaTeX2e)