Wed 28 Oct 2015 18:00 - 21:00 at Admiral and Reflections - Poster Session Chair(s): Jeff Huang, Nick Sumner

The growing ubiquity of personal connected devices has created the opportunity for a wide range of applications which tap into their sensors. The sensing requirements of applications often dynamically evolve over time depending on contextual factors, evolving interest in different types of data, or simply to economize resource consumption. The code implementing this evolution is typically mixed with that of the application’s functionality. Here we separate the two concerns by modeling the evolution of sensing requirements as transitions between modes. The paper describes, ModeSens, an approach to modeling and programming multi-modal sensing requirements of applications. The approach improves programmability by enhancing modularity by separating concerns. Furthermore, our experimental evaluation measures the performance and energy costs of using ModeSens.

Wed 28 Oct

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18:00 - 21:00
Poster SessionPosters at Admiral and Reflections
Chair(s): Jeff Huang Texas A&M University, Nick Sumner Simon Fraser University
18:00
3h
Talk
Shiranui: A Live Programming with Support for Unit Testing
Posters
Tomoki Imai Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, Hidehiko Masuhara Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, Tomoyuki Aotani Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Exploiting Parallelism in Mobile Devices
Posters
Arghya Chatterjee Rice University, USA, Timothy Newton Rice University, USA, Tom Roush Rice University, USA, Hunter Tidwell Rice University, USA, Vivek Sarkar Rice University
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
ModeSens: An Approach for Multi-modal Mobile Sensing
Posters
Ahmed Abdel Moamen University of Saskatchewan, Canada, Nadeem Jamali University of Saskatchewan, Canada
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Towards Transitory Encapsulation
Posters
Sebastian Fleissner Australian National University, Australia
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Statik: An Incremental Compiler Generator
Posters
Michael Biggs Broadway Technology, USA
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Toward Incremental Type Checking for Java
Posters
Edlira Kuci TU Darmstadt, Germany, Sebastian Erdweg TU Darmstadt, Germany, Mira Mezini TU Darmstadt
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Pyrlang: A High Performance Erlang Virtual Machine Based on RPython
Posters
Ruochen Huang Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, Hidehiko Masuhara Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, Tomoyuki Aotani Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Conf.Researchr.Org: Towards a Domain-Specific Content Management System for Managing Large Conference Websites
Posters
Elmer van Chastelet Delft University of Technology, Eelco Visser Delft University of Technology, Craig Anslow Middlesex University, London
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Evaluating Work Distribution Patterns for Parallel Bitmap Compression over SMPs
Posters
Ben McCamish Oregon State University, USA, Xinghui Zhao Washington State University, David Chiu University of Puget Sound, USA, Jason Sawin University of St. Thomas, USA, Guadalupe Canahuate University of Iowa, USA
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Spotter: Towards a Unified Search Interface in IDEs
Posters
Aliaksei Syrel University of Bern, Switzerland, Andrei Chiş University of Bern, Switzerland, Tudor Gîrba tudorgirba.com, Switzerland, Juraj Kubelka University of Chile, Chile, Oscar Nierstrasz University of Bern, Switzerland, Stefan Reichhart n.n., Switzerland
DOI Pre-print Media Attached
18:00
3h
Talk
Toward a Java Based Infrastructure for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
Posters
Yu David Liu State University of New York (SUNY) Binghamton, Lukasz Ziarek State University of New York (SUNY) Buffalo
DOI
18:00
3h
Talk
Porting the NetBeans Java 8 Enhanced for Loop Lambda Expression Refactoring to Eclipse
Posters
Md. Arefin New York City College of Technology, City University of New York, Raffi Khatchadourian Hunter College, City University of New York
DOI Pre-print File Attached