21.138 events: arts and humanities e-science; doctoral workshop on maths & engineering in CS

From: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk>
Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 06:36:37 +0100

               Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 21, No. 138.
       Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
  www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/humanities/cch/research/publications/humanist.html
                        www.princeton.edu/humanist/
                     Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu

   [1] From: Methnet <methnet_at_kcl.ac.uk> (29)
         Subject: Forthcoming lectures on arts and humanities e-science

   [2] From: staudek_at_fi.muni.cz (Jan Staudek) (34)
         Subject: MEMICS 2007, 2nd Call for Papers

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 06:32:11 +0100
         From: Methnet <methnet_at_kcl.ac.uk>
         Subject: Forthcoming lectures on arts and humanities e-science

Dear All,

The next lectures in the e-Science in the Arts and Humanities Theme
(see http://www.ahessc.ac.uk/theme) begin next week. The Theme,
organized by the Arts and Humanities e-Science Support Centre
(AHeSSC) and hosted by the e-Science Institute in Edinburgh, aims to
explore the new challenges for research in the Arts and Humanities
and to define the new research agenda that is made possible by e-
Science technology.

The lectures are:

Monday 2 July: Grid Enabling Humanities Datasets

Friday 6 July: e-Science and Performance

Monday 23 July: Aspects of Space and Time in Humanities e-Science

In all cases it will be possible to view the lecture on webcast, and
to ask questions or contribute to the debate, in real time via the
arts-humanities.net blog feature. Please visit http://wiki.esi.ac.uk/
E-Science_in_the_Arts_and_Humanities, and follow the 'Ask questions
during the lecture' link for more information about the blog, and the
'More details' link for more information about the events themselves
and the webcasts.

AHeSSC forms a critical part of the AHRC-JISC initiative on e-Science
in Arts and Humanities research. The Centre is hosted by King's
College London and located at the Arts and Humanities Data Service
(AHDS) and the AHRC Methods Network. AHeSSC exists to support, co-
ordinate and promote e-Science in all arts and humanities
disciplines, and to liaise with the e-Science and e-Social Science
communities, computing, and information sciences.

Please contact Stuart Dunn (stuart.dunn_at_kcl.ac.uk) or Tobias Blanke
(tobias.blanke_at_kcl.ac.uk) at AHeSSC for more information.

www.ahessc.ac.uk
www.jiscmail.ac.uk/ahessc (mailing list)

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 06:33:21 +0100
         From: staudek_at_fi.muni.cz (Jan Staudek)
         Subject: MEMICS 2007, 2nd Call for Papers

                            Second Call for Papers

                             3rd Doctoral Workshop
          on Mathematical and Engineering Methods in Computer Science
                                  MEMICS 2007

                             http://www.memics.cz/

                 October 26--28, 2007, Znojmo, Czech Republic

The MEMICS 2007 workshop is organized jointly by the Faculty of
Informatics, Masaryk University, and the Faculty of Information Technology,
Brno University of Technology.

The aim: To provide a forum for doctoral students interested in
applications of mathematical and engineering methods in computer science
with a special focus on the various aspects of parallel and distributed
systems.

Topics: Submissions are invited especially in the following but not
exclusive areas: parallel and distributed computing, GRID computing,
computer networks and advanced applications, models and techniques for
formal verification, security; also simulation, testing and diagnostics,
theory of formal languages, quantum computing, modern hardware concepts.

Invited lectures will be given by Javier Esparza (Munchen), Tiziana
Margaria-Steffen (Potsdam), Geraint Price (London), and Ian Taylor
(Cardiff).

Regular papers: Students are invited to register a paper before
September 2, 2007 and submit the paper (not exceeding 8 pages in the LNCS
style) before September 9, 2007. Authors will be notified of acceptance by
September 28, 2007. Detailed instructions are available at
http://www.memics.cz/.

Presentations: Students may also present recent outstanding work, if it has
been (or will be) presented at a leading computer science conference.
Presentations to be included in the programme will be selected on the basis
of a one-page abstract, which interested students are invited to submit.
The one-page abstracts will be published in the proceedings.

The proceedings will be available at the workshop in printed form. Selected
best papers will be considered for journal publication (with a full journal
review process).
[...]
Received on Thu Jun 28 2007 - 01:45:28 EDT

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Thu Jun 28 2007 - 01:45:31 EDT