首页> 外文会议>ACM SIGPLAN conference on Object oriented programming systems and applications companion >A rewriting approach to the design and evolution of object-oriented languages
【24h】

A rewriting approach to the design and evolution of object-oriented languages

机译:对面向对象语言的设计和演化的重写方法

获取原文

摘要

In conjunction with the program committee, it is my pleasure to present to you the research papers for the 2007 Conference on Object-Oriented Programming Systems, Languages, and Applications.After more than twenty years, ooPSLA remains a dynamic force for change and advance in the state of the art, as evidenced by the diverse program of 33 papers.I hope you find it as interesting and enjoyable as I do. >This year we accepted 33 out of 156 submissions, the highest number over the past ten years. This was a deliberate choice. In recent years there has been much debate in the field about whether our conference system (which is now widely accepted as a publication venue for tenure cases) has become overly selective to the point that authors tend to submit more conservative papers, as ACM president David Patterson cogently argued [1]. ooPSLA has been at the vanguard of addressing this problem with its Onward! And Essays programs, but I felt that we should apply some of the same ideas to the research program as well. >To implement this I first removed any particular limit or target for the number of papers accepted. This had the beneficial effect of allowing each paper to be considered independently, and avoiding considerations of whether one paper's acceptance would jeopardize another paper's chances. Secondly, I charged the committee to be "acceptance-positive," to forgive small faults (but correct them), and most importantly for the detractors of papers to give extra weight to the arguments of the proponents. However, continuity was also important. We continued the use of Oscar Nierstrasz's "Identify the Champion" paradigm, which tries to promote the selection of papers that are strongly advocated as opposed to those with good average scores [2]. Finally, I set a goal for the committee to decide all papers by consensus, and in the event that a vote was required to break a stalemate for the vote to only be among those committee members who had provided formal written reviews. >The committee met for two days, May 3rd and 4th , at IBM Research in Hawthorne, New York. In the event, all papers were decided by consensus and without recourse to voting. William Cook, the past chair, chaired the discussion of papers with which I had a conflict of interest. The modified system resulted in the acceptance of some papers that might otherwise have been rejected as too controversial or as more intriguing but less fully developed. The acceptance rate was 21% (up from 17%in 2006), so while we accommodated additional papers, ooPSLA remains a highly selective conference -- a healthy balance. >Two other issues regarding our community's conference system have recently been the subject of debate (and experimentation): double-blind review and submission of papers by members of the program committee. Allowing submissions by the committee increases the pool of submitters and increases the quality of the committee since it does not force them to choose between serving the community and publishing their own work, an especially difficult choice for academics who must consider not only their careers but those of their students. However, there is also the danger that such papers might receive preferential consideration. I chose the middle ground of allowing submissions by the committee but subjecting them to a quantitatively higher standard than other papers, and obtaining five reviews (rather than three for other submissions). Of the seven submissions by committee members, two were accepted. Of the rejected committee submissions, two had rankings that would otherwise likely have led to acceptance, but were not accepted according to the more stringent requirements (at least one A and no C's or D's, or else at least three A's and no more than one D). >Several SIGPLAN conferences have recently begun using double-blind review, a practice that is prevalent in some other subfields of computer science. The purpose of double-blind revie
机译:与方案委员会同时,我很高兴为您在2007年对面向对象的编程系统,语言和应用程序会议上的研究论文。超过二十年后,Oopsla仍然是改变和提前的动态力量本领域的国家,如33篇论文的多样化计划所证明。我希望你能像我一样发现它是有趣和愉快的。 >今年我们接受了156个提交的33个,最高数量过去十年。这是一个刻意的选择。近年来,关于我们的会议系统(现在被广泛被接受为期案件的出版物场地),这一领域有很大的辩论已经过分选择了作者倾向于提交更多保守论文,就像ACM总统大卫一样帕特森显着争辩[1]。 Oopsla一直在寻找这个问题的先锋!和散文计划,但我觉得我们也应该将一些相同的想法应用于研究计划。 >来实现我首先删除了接受的论文数量的任何特定限制或目标。这具有允许每张纸张被认为独立考虑的有益效果,并避免考虑一下纸张的接受会危害另一份纸张的机会。其次,我向委员会负责“接受积极”,以原谅小故障(但纠正它们),最重要的是对论文的批评者提供额外的支持者争论。然而,连续性也很重要。我们继续使用OSCAR Nierstrasz的“识别冠军”范式,这试图促进强烈倡导的文件的选择,而不是平均分数的人[2]。最后,我设立了委员会通过共识决定所有文件的目标,并且如果需要投票,以便在提供正式书面审查的委员会成员中打破投票的僵局。

委员会在纽约霍桑的IBM Research举行了两天,5月3日和第4天。在此次活动中,所有论文都由共识决定,无需求助。威廉厨师过去的椅子,主席讨论了我对其有利益冲突的论文。修改的系统导致了接受可能被拒绝的文件,否则可能被拒绝或更有趣但更易于充分发育。接受率为21%(从2006年的17%,虽然我们容纳额外的论文,但Oopsla仍然是一个高度选择性的会议 - 健康的平衡。 >关于我们社区的会议系统的另外两个问题最近是辩论(和实验)的主题:通过计划委员会成员审查和提交论文。委员会提交提交提交提交者增加了提交者,增加了委员会的质量,因为它没有强迫他们在为社区服务和出版自己的工作之间,这是必须考虑其职业的学术界特别困难的选择,而是那些他们的学生。但是,此类论文可能会获得优惠考虑的危险。我选择了委员会提交的中间立场,但是将他们定量更高的标准比其他文件,并获得五次评论(而不是其他意见书)。在委员会成员的七个提交的中,被接受了两份。在被拒绝的委员会提交中,两个人有可能导致接受的排名,但不根据更严格的要求(至少一个A和NO C或D',或者至少三个A的和不超过一个)接受d)。 >几个简单的会议最近开始使用双盲审查,这是计算机科学其他一些子场中普遍的练习。双盲revie的目的

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号