Call for papers
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ACM Transactions on Internet Technology (TOIT)
Special Issue on Recent Advances in Networks and Distributed Systems
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Scope
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Several
recent developments like the advent of the Internet-of-Things, network
softwarization, mission-critical applications, and artificial
intelligence have posed challenges for the Internet, and more generally
for networks and distributed systems:
(1: IoT) The
Internet-of-Things will boost the number of Internet nodes well beyond
the billions, leads to new traffic patterns (e.g., high-frequency
low-volume), and accelerates the other developments described hereafter.
(2:
SDN++) Softwarization "conquers" the net. What has started with SDN and
NFV will continue to lead to more flexibility and enable disruptive
change, such as the competitive co-existence of old and new, e.g.,
content-centric, world-wide networks. As this softwarization
significantly increases the complexity of today's networks, new and more
security problems will result. Moreover, softwarization comes at a
performance price, which is at odds with mission-critical, real-time
communication.
(3: MCA) Mission-critical applications, formerly
confined to dedicated real-time systems and (TSN, industrial Ethernet,
...) networks, are conquering public and wide area networks. This
impacts technologies and protocols (such as 5G URLLC) as well as
architectures, such as approaches to move cloud functionality closer to
the action scene, e.g., via fog and edge computing.
(4: AI.net) The
resurgence of AI, evoked by stunning successes of machine learning,
boosts the need for computing resources that cannot be embedded in
myriads of IoT devices and energy-critical handhelds like smartphones.
This and the need for joint processing, requires shuffling 'big data'
from the action scene to those resources, accelerating the need for
offloading approaches and, depending on the application and the
distribution of stakeholders, aggravating the three afore-mentioned
challenges.
These four challenges - abbreviated as IoT, SDN++,
MCA, and AI - are densely interwoven, both mutually supporting and
mutually aggravating each other. In the TOIT special issue, we bring
together contributions to all four challenges and seek to track down
their positive and negative interdependencies.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
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* Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning and their application in, and impacts on, networking
* Evolution from cloud computing to mobile cloud, fog and edge computing
* Consistency, reliability, availability, and programming support for meeting the MCA challenge in networks
* Contributions to the four challenges in context of cyber-physical systems
* Emerging networked applications
* Green and energy-efficient networks and networked systems
* Information-centric networking, content distribution and retrieval, and their co-existence with classical networks
* Network architectures and protocols
* Approaches to the pertinent network security and privacy aspects
* Methods for design, implementation, and analysis of networked systems considering the recent challenges and advances
* Pertinent middleware architectures and platforms for networked systems
* Pertinent concepts for mobile, ad-hoc, opportunistic, vehicular, sensor networks
* Advancements to software-defined networking, network function virtualization, and further network softwarization
* Reflection of recent challenges in SoA, web services, and mobile services
* Advancements in social networks, social computing, data-intensive computing
* Novel concepts for tactile and low-latency communication
* Transport- and application-layer protocols in response to the four challenges
Submission Instructions
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Please refer to
http://toit.acm.org/authors.cfm for submission instructions.
Submit your paper at
https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/acm/toit
and select the SI “Recent Advances in Networks and Distributed
Systems”. However, please be aware that the submission will not be
possible until one month before the actual deadline.
Important Dates
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* Manuscript submission: 31 March 2021
* First notification: 31 June 2021
* Revised version: 31 August 2021
* Final notification: 30 September 2021
* Final paper due: 15 October 2021
* Publication date: To be scheduled 2021/2022
Guest Editors
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* Prof. Jörg Liebherr, University of Toronto, Canada
* Prof. Mathias Fischer, Universität Hamburg, Germany
* Prof. Max Mühlhäuser, TU Darmstadt, Germany
* Prof. Winfried Lamersdorf, Universität Hamburg, Germany
Fur further information, please email
mathias...@ieee.org