2009-02-21: CFP: VizSec 2009 Workshop on Visualization for Cyber Security: Difference between revisions
(New page: ==VizSEC_2009== ===Workshop on Visualization for Cyber Security=== ===October 11, 2009 / Atlantic City, NJ USA=== http://vizsec.org/vizsec2009/ ====Call For Participation==== ...) |
|||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
= | 9Rg9MM <a href="http://ubhlmfiejbta.com/">ubhlmfiejbta</a>, [url=http://cinuhsdetkxu.com/]cinuhsdetkxu[/url], [link=http://pqzluzqqqaml.com/]pqzluzqqqaml[/link], http://gmaghqeaworz.com/ | ||
====Important Dates==== | ====Important Dates==== |
Revision as of 16:07, 9 May 2010
VizSEC_2009
Workshop on Visualization for Cyber Security
October 11, 2009 / Atlantic City, NJ USA
Call For Participation
The 6th International Workshop on Visualization for Cyber Security is a forum that brings together researchers and practitioners in information visualization and security to address the specific needs of the cyber security community through new and insightful visualization techniques. Co-located this year with IEEE InfoVis/Vis/VAST, VizSec will continue to provide opportunities for the two communities to collaborate and share insights into providing solutions for security needs through visualization approaches. Accepted papers will be published by the IEEE and archived in the IEEE Digital Library. The authors of the best papers will be invited to extend and revise their paper for journal publication in a special issue of Information Visualization.
This year our focus is on advancing Visualization for Cyber Security as a scientific discipline. While art, engineering, and intuitions regarding the human element will always remain important if we are to obtain useful cyber security visualizations, advances in the scientific practice of research are needed. The scientific aspects of visualization for cyber security draw both on empirical observation (similar to many natural and social sciences) and formal science (such as the formal derivations in mathematics). Barriers confronting current researchers include concerns about available data, lack of a common agreement about what constitutes sound experimental design, the difficulties of measuring the relative effectiveness of security visualizations in practice, and the lack of a common understanding of user requirements. While many researchers are making progress in these and other critical areas, much work yet remains.
9Rg9MM <a href="http://ubhlmfiejbta.com/">ubhlmfiejbta</a>, [url=http://cinuhsdetkxu.com/]cinuhsdetkxu[/url], [link=http://pqzluzqqqaml.com/]pqzluzqqqaml[/link], http://gmaghqeaworz.com/
Important Dates
April 24, 2009 - Deadline for full paper submission
May 22, 2009 - Deadline for short paper submissions
June 5, 2009 - Notification of paper acceptance
June 26, 2009 - Deadline for final camera ready full and short papers
Paper Format
Submitted papers must not substantially overlap papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings. All submissions should be appropriately anonymized (i.e., papers should not contain author names or affiliations, or obvious citations). Submissions are to be made to the submission web site at http://www.vizsec.org/vizsec2009/submit. Only pdf files will be accepted. Papers should be formatted using the IEEE templates (see http://www.vizsec.org/vizsec2009/ for instructions).
- Full papers should be at most 12 pages, including the bibliography and appendices.
- Short papers should be at most 6 pages, including the bibliography and appendices.
Committee members are not required to read the appendices, and so the paper should be intelligible without them. Submissions not meeting these guidelines risk rejection without consideration of their merits. Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their papers will be presented at the conference.
Papers must be received by the deadline of April 24, 2009, for long papers and May 22, 2009, for short papers.
Journal Special Issue
The authors of the best papers from the accepted program will be invited to extend and revise their paper for a special issue of Information Visualization (IVS), an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing articles on fundamental research and applications of information visualization. These papers will be chosen by the program committee.
Paper Award
There will be an award for the best paper from the accepted program. The best paper award will be given to the paper judged to have the highest overall quality. A key element of the best paper selection process will be whether the results are believed to be repeatable by other scientists based on the algorithms and data provided in the paper. This award will be chosen by the program committee.
Scholarships
A limited number of scholarships will be available for students and first-year faculty who have had papers accepted to VizSec.
Organizing Committee
General Chair: Deborah Frincke, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and University of Washington
Program Co-Chair: Carrie Gates, CA Labs
Program Co-Chair: John Goodall, Secure Decisions Division of Applied Visions
Papers Chair: Robert Erbacher, Utah State University