2nd International Workshop on High Performance Big Graph Data Management, Analysis, and Mining (BigGraph 2015)

Publish Date: Aug 18, 2015

Deadline: Aug 30, 2015

Second International Workshop on

High Performance Big Graph Data

Management, Analysis, and Mining

Full-day Workshop at

2015 IEEE International Conference on Big Data (IEEE BigData 2015)
Oct 29 - Nov 1, 2015
Santa Clara, CA, USA

Workshop Description

Modern Big Data increasingly appears in the form of complex graphs and networks. Examples include the physical Internet, the world wide web, online social networks, phone networks, and biological networks. In addition to their massive sizes, these graphs are dynamic, noisy, and sometimes transient. They also conform to all five Vs (Volume, Velocity, Variety, Value and Veracity) that define Big Data. However, many graph-related problems are computationally difficult, and thus big graph data brings unique challenges, as well as numerous opportunities for researchers, to solve various problems that are significant to our communities.

Big graph problems are currently solved using several complementary paradigms. The most popular approach is perhaps by exploiting parallelism, through specialized algorithms for supercomputers, shared-memory multicore and manycore systems, and heterogeneous CPU-GPU systems. However, since real-world graphs are sparse and highly irregular, there are very few parallel implementations that can actually deliver high performance. The major challenges to scaling and efficiency include irregular data dependencies, poor locality, and high synchronization costs of current approaches. In addition to parallelism, researchers are developing approximation algorithms that use sampling for compressing and summarizing graph data. Streaming algorithms are also being considered for scenarios where the rate of updates is too fast to process the entire graph in a single pass. Further, out-of-core algorithms are necessary for massive graphs that do not fit in the main memory of a typical system. Researchers can use graph-based solutions for solving problems from many diverse disciplines, including routing and transportation, social networks, bioinformatics, computational science, health care, security and intelligence analysis.

This workshop aims to bring together researchers from different paradigms solving big graph problems under a unified platform for sharing their work and exchanging ideas. We are soliciting novel and original research contributions related to big graph data management, analysis, and mining (algorithms, software systems, applications, best practices, performance). Significant work-in-progress papers are also encouraged. Papers can be from any of the following areas, including but not limited to:

  • Parallel algorithms for big graph analysis on HPC systems
  • Heterogeneous CPU-GPU solutions to solve big graph problems
  • Extreme-scale computing for large graph, tensor, and network problems
  • Sampling and summarization of large graphs
  • Graph algorithms for large-scale scientific computing problems
  • Graph clustering, partitioning, and classification methods
  • Scalable graph topology measurement: diameter approximation, eigenvalues, triangle and graphlet counting
  • Parallel algorithms for computing graph kernels
  • Inference on large graph data
  • Graph evolution and dynamic graph models
  • Graph databases, novel querying and indexing strategies for RDF data
  • Novel applications of big graph problems in bioinformatics, health care, security, and social networks
  • New software systems and runtime systems for big graph data mining

Submissions must be at most 8 pages long, including all figures, tables, and references. They must be formatted according to the IEEE Computer Society Proceedings manuscript preparation guidelines.

Important Dates

  • Aug 30, 2015: Submission deadline

  • Sep 20, 2015: Notification of paper acceptance to authors

  • Oct 5, 2015: Camera-ready submissions due

  • Oct 29 or Nov 1, 2015: Workshop date

Workshop Organizers

Mohammad Al Hasan
Department of Computer and Information Science
Indiana University - Purdue University
Indianapolis, IN 46202

Kamesh Madduri
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
The Pennsylvania State University
University Park, PA 16802

Fengguang Song
Department of Computer and Information Science
Indiana University - Purdue University
Indianapolis, IN 46202

Program Committee

To be announced.

Contact

Please send email to one of the workshop organizers.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

http://biggraphs.org/

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Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United States

Event Types

Workshops