Paper Submission



Paper Awards

Best Regular Paper:

Paper #32: Tasnia Tabassum, Andrew Allen, and Pradipta De, Non-Intrusive Identification of Student Attentiveness and Finding their Correlation with Detectable Facial Emotions

Best Short Paper:

Paper #117: Phong Vu, Tam Nguyen, and Tung Nguyen, Fuzzy Multi-intent Classifier for User Generated Software Documents

Best Fast Abstract:

Paper #57: Nusrat Asrafi, Professor Dan Lo, Reza Meimandi Parizi, and Yu-Wen Chen, Comparing Performance of Malware Classification on Automated Stacking Platforms

Best Poster:

Paper #65: Karl Kevin, Tiba Fossoh,and Dan Lo, Graphical Representation of Text Semantics



All submissions must be submitted electronically as either a Microsoft Word document or an Adobe PDF file using EasyChair

Abstract Submission Due Date:

11/17/2019

Submission Due Date:

1/2/2020
(double blind)

Extended to: 1/19/2020
(double blind)

Notification to Authors:

2/15/2020

Camera Ready Version:

3/1/2020

 

ACM SouthEast provides an excellent forum for faculty, students, industry practitioners, and researchers to present their research in a friendly and dynamic atmosphere. Manuscript review will be "double-blind" where manuscripts will be submitted lacking author(s) names and affiliations.   All accepted papers will be published in the ACMSE proceedings. At least one author of every accepted manuscript must register to attend the conference and present his/her article. Failure to do so will result in exclusion from the conference proceedings.   Submissions should follow ACM conference format

  • Regular papers - up to 8 single spaced pages in length. An acceptance rate of approximately 35% is anticipated for the Regular Paper category. Declined manuscripts may be submitted for consideration as short-papers or "works in progress". Awards for best regular papers in various categories will be presented.
  • Short-Papers or "works in progress" not to exceed 4 pages. An acceptance rate is targeted at 45% for this category. Accepted short-papers will be published in the proceedings.
  • The Fast Abstract symposium seeks to bring together students, faculty, and researchers working in computer software and applications and related fields. A Fast Abstract is a lightly reviewed, two-page article that may be presenting new ideas or work in progress, or opinions that address any issue relevant to computer software and applications and related fields. We also welcome contributions that may have thought provoking ideas based on theory or application or development experience, and may have initial or proof of concept results. The presenter will have the opportunity to discuss their research idea, methodology, and results with other peer researchers and receive useful guidance and feedback to refine their ideas or towards the completion of the research and potential initiation of research careers. Acceptance rate target is 55%.
  • Faculty and Student Posters authored by faculty or graduate and undergraduate students. Poster proposals must be submitted as an extended abstract not to exceed three pages including the sections of Problem and Motivation, Background and Related Work, Approach and Uniqueness and Results and Contributions. Awards for best student short-papers/posters will be presented. A one-page abstract will be published in the proceedings. Acceptance rate target is 65%.
  • Tutorials/Workshops covering introductory or advanced topics. Proposals for workshops should include a title, abstract, statement of purpose, objectives, prerequisites, intended audience, duration (1.5 or 3 hours), materials needed (including lab space) and resources to be handed out. Proposals are not to exceed 2 pages.
  • Panels presenting multiple perspectives on a specific topic. Panel submissions must not exceed two pages and should list panelists and their affiliations and include a description of the topic with brief position statements from the panelists. A minimum of 4 participants, including the moderator is suggested.
  • The goal of the ACMSE Graduate Research Symposium is to create a forum for graduate students working on all areas in computer science with an opportunity to present and discuss their research with senior researchers of the ACMSE community in a constructive and friendly atmosphere. Experts in ACMSE will provide students with feedback on their research, allowing students to ask questions about how they can overcome obstacles or enhance their current research proposals. Student submissions must outline a research topic with a suitable research plan. Students should have a year or more remaining in their research program in order to incorporate the feedback obtained during the symposium into their dissertations.
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