XLOOP 2020Posted in

2nd Annual Workshop on Extreme-scale Experiment-in-the-Loop Computing

Event Dates

Nov 12, 2020 - Nov 12, 2020

Location

Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Submission Deadline

Sep 13, 2020

2nd Annual Workshop on Extreme-scale Experiment-in-the-Loop Computing @ SC

10am-2pm, Thursday Nov. 12, 2020, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Workshop website: https://wordpress.cels.anl.gov/xloop-2020

Continued advances in computational power and high-speed networking is

enabling a new model of scientific experiment, experiment-in-the-loop

computing (EILC). In this model, high-end computing systems are closely

coupled to experimental and observational infrastructure, and the two

interact to drive a deeper understanding of physical phenomena. At the

same time, advances and widespread adoption of machine learning enables

new ways to register and use experimental data.

Several research and development challenges are posed by this

multifaceted paradigm, many of which are independent of the particular

scientific application domain. New algorithms to integrate simulation

outputs and experimental data sets must be developed. High performance

data management and transfer techniques must be developed to manage and

manipulate simulated and observed data sets. Workflows must be

constructed with high levels of usability and understandability to

enable scientific post-analysis and improvement of the computing solution.

The Workshop on Experiment-in-the-Loop Computing (XLOOP 2020) will be a

unique opportunity to promote this cross-cutting, interdisciplinary

topic area. We invite papers, presentations, and participants from

the physical and computer sciences, and encourage the sharing of

ideas from across these domains to find common solutions and

technologies to make rapid progress in EILC, so that many application

areas can easily adopt these methods.

XLOOP is held in conjunction with SC20: The International Conference

on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis.

== Topics ==

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Machine learning applications in simulation or experiment control

Case studies in EILC applications and solutions

Data transfer techniques and technologies

In situ analysis methods and tools relevant to experiment data

Simulation and experiment validation methods and tools

Workflow technologies to manage computation and experiment couplings

Advanced systems architecture for EILC applications

High-performance I/O methods and libraries

Data integration and assimilation algorithms and technologies

Performance evaluation in EILC applications and solutions

Cyberinfrastructure and “big science” planning and reporting

== Paper Submission ==

Please submit novel papers with up to 6 pages in IEEE style via the SC

Linklings site.

== Important dates ==

Submissions due: September 13, 2020

Author notification: September 24, 2020

Camera-ready version: October 1, 2020

== Organization ==

Workshop Chairs:

Justin M. Wozniak (Argonne National Laboratory)

Nicholas Schwarz (Argonne National Laboratory)

Contact us at xloop-chairs@lists.dsl.anl.gov .

Workshop Steering Committee:

Debbie Bard (National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center)

Robert Clay (Sandia National Laboratory)

Sudharshan Vazhkudai (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)

Venkatram Vishwanath (Argonne National Laboratory)

Workshop Program Committee:

Francis Alexander (Brookhaven National Laboratory)

Tekin Bicer (Argonne National Laboratory)

Shantenu Jha (Rutgers)

Bojan Nikolic (Square Kilometer Array, Cambridge)

Raymond Osborn (Argonne National Laboratory)

Marc F. Paterno (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)

Amedeo Perazzo (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory)

Thomas E. Proffen (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)

Lavanya Ramakrishnan (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

Tobias Richter (European Spallation Source)

Christine Sweeney (Los Alamos National Laboratory)

Thomas D. Uram (Argonne National Laboratory)