The goal of the New and Emerging Ideas (NEMI) track at ICSA 2019 is to encourage the software architecture community to propose new software architecture research visions and ideas, which can potentially challenge the status quo of the software architecture discipline (research and practice) and point to new directions and opportunities.

Important Dates (AoE)

  • Abstracts (mandatory) due: 29 November 2018
  • Papers due:  06 December 2018
  • Papers notification: 17 January 2019
  • Camera-ready due: 07 February 2019 22 February 2019

Types of submissions

The ICSA 2019 NEMI track seeks the following types of contributions:

New Ideas (4 pages):

  • Visions or new directions supported by a strong and well motivated scientific foundation or practical application;
  • Arguments or results that challenge established results or beliefs, giving evidence that calls for fundamentally new directions, opening up new research avenues or software architecture practices;
  • Radically new approaches, techniques, or theories that can bring new results to software architecture research or practice.

Emerging Results (4 pages):

  • Not yet fully mature research results, that may lack full validation but that still can stimulate discussions; papers should trigger discussion and raise awareness and reflection on specific topics, in research and/or industrial practice.

NEMI papers must clearly motivate and illustrate a rationale for changing current practice and/or research in software architecture. Evaluation results are not required for NEMI papers (but if such results exist, then they may be presented, if only to give the reviewers a feel about the evaluation plan). Strong argumentation and reasoning is expected to inspire the readers.

Scope

NEMI provides a forum for innovative, thought-provoking insights in software architecture in order to accelerate the exposure of the community to early and on-going yet promising and potentially inspiring innovations in industry and academia.

NEMI papers are not second-class ICSA research track papers. NEMI is a forum for first-class contributions that provide novel, soundly motivated directions and emerging results in research and practice.

In principle, the track addresses the same topics of interest as those of the technical paper track. However, NEMI authors are encouraged to combine these topics in new ways, to establish connections to other fields outside of classical software architecture, push the boundaries of software architecture to new avenues, as well as to argue for the importance of software architecture research and practice in areas not explicitly listed.

Out of scope

A NEMI submission should not be just incremental results on existing research, nor disguised advertisements for previously published results, products, tools or methods, or experience reports. ICSA 2019 has several tracks and workshops where such works can be submitted..

Evaluation

All submissions will be evaluated in terms of the following criteria:

  • Value: the problem is worth exploring, ideally real world use-inspired.
  • Impact: the potential for disruption of current practice and/or research;
  • Originality: new insights or ideas/visions;
  • Rationale: soundness of the justification, reasoning and argumentation;
  • Evaluation: appropriate consideration of relevant literature and/or research evaluation to demonstrate originality, arguments and limitations;
  • Quality: overall manuscript quality.

Formatting and Submission Instructions

All NEMI submissions must conform to the Author Instructions, and must not exceed four pages, including all text, references, appendices, and figures. No double-blind, but single-blind review will apply to NEMI papers. All papers are to be submitted electronically via the NEMI EasyChair submission system, by the submission deadline. Submissions must not have been published elsewhere and must not be under review or submitted for review elsewhere while under consideration for ICSA 2019 NEMI track.. Note that in addition to an oral plenary presentation at the conference, authors of accepted papers may also bring a poster describing their work to further showcase their work to a broader ICSA audience.

Note in addition to an oral plenary presentation at the conference, authors of accepted papers may also bring a poster describing their work to further showcase their work to a broader ICSA audience.

Publication and attendance

All accepted contributions will be published in ICSA 2019 Companion proceedings, and appear in IEEE Xplore Digital Library. At least one author of an accepted contribution is required to register and present the work at the conference.

Organization

For more information please contact the NEMI Track chairs through icsa2019nemi@easychair.org:

  • Eltjo Poort (CGI, The Netherlands)
  • Matthias Galster (University of Canterbury, New Zealand)

Program Committee

  • Nour Ali, Brunel University, UK
  • Martin Becker, Fraunhofer IESE, Germany
  • Thorsten Berger, Chalmers | University of Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Elisabetta Di Nitto, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
  • Ilias Gerostathopoulos, Technical University of Munich, Germany
  • Sebastian Herold, Karlstad University, Sweden
  • Michael Keeling, IBM, USA
  • John Klein, Software Engineering Institute, USA
  • Emily Law, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA
  • Elisa Yumi Nakagawa, University of São Paulo, Brazil
  • Jørn Ølmheim, Statoil ASA, Norway
  • Patrizia Scandurra, DIIMM - University of Bergamo, Italy
  • Maria Spichkova, RMIT University, Australia
  • Jan Martijn Van Der Werf, Utrecht University, Netherlands
  • Xiwei Xu, CSIRO, Australia