Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming 2023
PPoPP is the premier forum for leading work on all aspects of parallel programming, including theoretical foundations, techniques, languages, compilers, runtime systems, tools, and practical experience. In the context of the symposium, “parallel programming” encompasses work on concurrent and parallel systems (multicore, multi-threaded, heterogeneous, clustered, and distributed systems; grids; datacenters; clouds; and large scale machines). Given the rise of parallel architectures in the consumer market (desktops, laptops, and mobile devices) and data centers, PPoPP is particularly interested in work that addresses new parallel workloads and issues that arise out of extreme-scale applications or cloud platforms, as well as techniques and tools that improve the productivity of parallel programming or work towards improved synergy with such emerging architectures.
View the track page for all the details of the main conference.
Proceedings will be available in the ACM Digital Library.
Best Paper
Provably Fast and Space-Efficient Parallel Biconnectivity
Xiaojun Dong (University of California, Riverside), Letong Wang (University of California, Riverside), Yan Gu (University of California, Riverside), Yihan Sun (University of California, Riverside)
Best Artifact
High-Performance and Scalable Agent-Based Simulation with BioDynaMo
Lukas Breitwieser (European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), ETH Zurich), Ahmad Hesam (Delft University of Technology), Fons Rademakers (CERN), Juan Gómez Luna (ETH Zurich), Onur Mutlu (ETH Zurich)
PPoPP Program
Click here for the full PPoPP23 program.
Important Dates
- Full paper submission: August 17, 2022
- Author response period: October 26–October 28, 2022
- Author notification: November 7, 2022
- Artifact submission to AE committee: November 16, 2022
- Artifact notification by AE committee: December 30, 2022
- Final paper due: January 6, 2023
All deadlines are at midnight anywhere on earth (AoE), and are firm.
More information from here
Code of Conduct
The open exchange of ideas and the freedom of thought and expression are central to the aims and goals of SIGPLAN; these require an environment that recognizes the inherent worth of every person and group, that fosters dignity, understanding, and mutual respect, and that embraces diversity. For these reasons, SIGPLAN is dedicated to providing a harassment-free conference experience, and abides by the ACM Policy Against Discrimination and Harassment at ACM Activities.
Conference participants violating these standards may be sanctioned or expelled from the conference, at the discretion of the conference organizers. Conference organizers are requested to report serious incidents to the SIGPLAN Vice Chair.