International Conference on Automated Software Engineering

Last updated
International Conference on Automated Software Engineering
AbbreviationASE
Discipline software engineering
Publication details
Publisher?
History1986–
Frequencyannual

The International Conference on Automated Software Engineering (ASE) is a large annual software engineering conference. The first conference in the series was held in 1986. Between 1986 and 1990 the conference was known as Knowledge-Based Software Assistant (KBSA), between 1991 and 1996 the conference was known as Knowledge-Based Software Engineering (KBSE). [1]

Contents

List of Conferences

Past and future ASE conferences include: [2]

YearConferenceCityCountryNotes
2014 ASE-29 Västerås, Sweden Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden
2013 ASE-28 Palo Alto, California Flag of the United States.svg USA
2012 ASE-27 Essen, Germany Flag of Germany.svg Germany
2011 ASE-26 Lawrence, Kansas Flag of the United States.svg USA
2010 ASE-25 Antwerp Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium
2009 ASE-24 Auckland Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand
2008 ASE-23 L'Aquila Flag of Italy.svg Italy
2007 ASE-22 Atlanta Flag of the United States.svg USA
2006 ASE-21 Tokyo Flag of Japan.svg Japan
2005 ASE-20 Long Beach, California Flag of the United States.svg USA
2004 ASE-19 Linz Flag of Austria.svg Austria
2003 ASE-18 Montreal Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada
2002 ASE-17 Edinburgh Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK
2001 ASE-16 San Diego Flag of the United States.svg USA
2000 ASE-15 Grenoble Flag of France.svg France
1999 ASE-14 Cocoa Beach, Florida Flag of the United States.svg USA
1998 ASE-13 Honolulu, Hawaii Flag of the United States.svg USA
1997 ASE-12 Lake Tahoe, Nevada Flag of the United States.svg USA
1996KBSE-11 Syracuse, New York Flag of the United States.svg USA program
1995KBSE-10 Boston, Massachusetts Flag of the United States.svg USA program, summary
1994KBSE-9 Monterey, California Flag of the United States.svg USA program
1993KBSE-8 Chicago, Illinois Flag of the United States.svg USA program, summary
1992KBSE-7 McLean, Virginia Flag of the United States.svg USA program, summary
1991KBSE-6 Syracuse, New York Flag of the United States.svg USA summary
1990KBSA-5 Syracuse, New York Flag of the United States.svg USA summary
1989KBSA-4
1988KBSA-3
1987KBSA-2
1986KBSA-1

Related Research Articles

Software engineering is the systematic application of engineering approaches to the development of software.

The Semantic Web is an extension of the World Wide Web through standards set by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The goal of the Semantic Web is to make Internet data machine-readable.

Web annotation refers to

  1. online annotations of web resources such as web pages or parts of them, and
  2. a set of W3C standards developed for this purpose.
Decision support system

A decision support system (DSS) is an information system that supports business or organizational decision-making activities. DSSs serve the management, operations and planning levels of an organization and help people make decisions about problems that may be rapidly changing and not easily specified in advance—i.e. unstructured and semi-structured decision problems. Decision support systems can be either fully computerized or human-powered, or a combination of both.

LinuxQuestions.org

LinuxQuestions.org is a community-driven, self-help web site for Linux users. As of August 2011, it has over 462,200 registered members. Started in 2000 by Jeremy Garcia, LQ is one of the most popular free software community sites and is usually reputed for helpfulness.

The World Wide Web has become a major delivery platform for a variety of complex and sophisticated enterprise applications in several domains. In addition to their inherent multifaceted functionality, these Web applications exhibit complex behaviour and place some unique demands on their usability, performance, security, and ability to grow and evolve. However, a vast majority of these applications continue to be developed in an ad hoc way, contributing to problems of usability, maintainability, quality and reliability. While Web development can benefit from established practices from other related disciplines, it has certain distinguishing characteristics that demand special considerations. In recent years, there have been developments towards addressing these considerations.

A documentation generator is a programming tool that generates software documentation intended for programmers or end users, or both, from a set of source code files, and in some cases, binary files. Some generators, such Javadoc, can use special comments to drive the generation. Doxygen is an example of a generator that can use all of these methods.

Software visualization or software visualisation refers to the visualization of information of and related to software systems—either the architecture of its source code or metrics of their runtime behavior—and their development process by means of static, interactive or animated 2-D or 3-D visual representations of their structure, execution, behavior, and evolution.

SIGKDD, representing the Association for Computing Machinery's (ACM) Special Interest Group (SIG) on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, hosts an influential annual conference.

Social software engineering (SSE) is a branch of software engineering that is concerned with the social aspects of software development and the developed software.

Ontology engineering field which studies the methods and methodologies for building ontologies

In computer science, information science and systems engineering, ontology engineering is a field which studies the methods and methodologies for building ontologies, which encompasses a representation, formal naming and definition of the categories, properties and relations between the concepts, data and entities. In a broader sense, this field also includes a knowledge construction of the domain using formal ontology representations such as OWL/RDF. A large-scale representation of abstract concepts such as actions, time, physical objects and beliefs would be an example of ontological engineering. Ontology engineering is one of the areas of applied ontology, and can be seen as an application of philosophical ontology. Core ideas and objectives of ontology engineering are also central in conceptual modeling.

SEMAT is an initiative to reshape software engineering such that software engineering qualifies as a rigorous discipline. The initiative was launched in December 2009 by Ivar Jacobson, Bertrand Meyer, and Richard Soley with a call for action statement and a vision statement. The initiative was envisioned as a multi-year effort for bridging the gap between the developer community and the academic community and for creating a community giving value to the whole software community.

The International Conference on DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION SYSTEMS (DAS) is a regional leading international academic conference organized every two years by the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Ştefan cel Mare University of Suceava, Romania, attracting every edition more than 150 participants from more than 15 countries. It is normally held in May.

Siemens NX

NX, formerly known as "unigraphics", is an advanced high-end CAD/CAM/CAE, which has been owned since 2007 by Siemens PLM Software. In 2000, Unigraphics purchased SDRC I-DEAS and began an effort to integrate aspects of both software packages into a single product which became Unigraphics NX or NX.

Knowledge extraction is the creation of knowledge from structured and unstructured sources. The resulting knowledge needs to be in a machine-readable and machine-interpretable format and must represent knowledge in a manner that facilitates inferencing. Although it is methodically similar to information extraction (NLP) and ETL, the main criteria is that the extraction result goes beyond the creation of structured information or the transformation into a relational schema. It requires either the reuse of existing formal knowledge or the generation of a schema based on the source data.

Taxonomy is the practice and science of categorization or classification based on discrete sets. The word finds its roots in the Greek language τάξις, taxis and νόμος, nomos.

Lori L. Pollock is an American Computer Scientist noted for her research on software analysis and testing, green software engineering and compiler optimization.

SIGAI

ACM SIGAI is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence (AI), an interdisciplinary group of academic and industrial researchers, practitioners, software developers, end users, and students who work together to promote and support the growth and application of AI principles and techniques throughout computing. SIGAI is one of the oldest special interest groups in the ACM. SIGAI, previously called SIGART, started in 1966, publishing the SIGART Newsletter that later became the SIGART Bulletin and Intelligence Magazine.

The Software Product Line Conference SPLC is an international conference which is held annually.

Grigore Rosu Computer science professor

Grigore Roșu is a computer science professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a researcher in the Information Trust Institute. He is known for his contributions in runtime verification, K framework, matching logic, and automated coinduction.

References