CLOSED: Call for Papers: The 8th Annual IEEE International Conference on Rebooting Computing (ICRC) 2023

5-6 December 2023 | San Diego, CA, USA
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Submissions Due: 30 September 2023

Important Dates

  • Paper submissions due: 30 September 2023

Conference Date: 5-6 December 2023 | San Diego, CA, USA


About the Conference

The 8th IEEE International Conference on Rebooting Computing (ICRC) 2023 will be held from December 5-6, 2022, in San Diego, CA, USA. ICRC grew out of the IEEE Rebooting Computing Initiative (RCI), which was founded in 2012 to catalyze rethinking of the computer at all levels of the technology stack. The Rebooting Computing community represents multiple IEEE Societies and Councils, and the membership in the technical community is over two thousand. For more information on the RCI please visit the Rebooting Computing Portal.


Submission​ ​Details

Now, in its 8th year, IEEE ICRC 2023 is the premier venue for forward-looking research across the computing stack, including novel materials, devices, circuits, algorithms, languages, system software, and system and network architectures. This is an interdisciplinary conference that has participation from a broad technical community, and novel research contributions encompassing co-design across the computing stack are highly encouraged. Bridging analog and neural computing, reversible and quantum computing, and other new architectures, the broad scope of ICRC extends to many areas of interest, including harnessing novel device physics and materials for energy efficiency, performance, density, and unique computing capabilities.

Topics of Interest:

  • Future Computing Paradigms: Including but not limited to neuromorphic computing, brain-inspired computing, approximate and probabilistic computing, and analog and physical computing; computing based on novel device physics and materials; energy-efficient computing including reversible computing, adiabatic computing, ballistic computing, and superconductor and cryogenic computing; quantum computing; optical computing; biological and biochemical computing; non-von Neumann computer architectures (e.g., in-memory processing, memory-based computing, content addressable memory, cellular automata, or neural networks); graph processing architectures.
  • Future Design Aspects for Computing: Including but not limited to extending Moore’s law and augmenting CMOS; error-tolerant logic and circuits; future of design automation; post-CMOS, 3D, heterogeneous integration, and packaging; future impact on performance, power, scalability, reliability, and supportability; modeling and simulation tools for future computing.
  • Future Software and Applications: Including but not limited to beyond von Neumann system software issues (operating systems, compilers, security, and resource management); future programming paradigms and languages; applications suitable for and driving next generation computing (e.g., machine learning, deep learning, edge computing etc.); algorithms that are enabled by or optimized for new computing approaches.
  • Future Computing Use Cases and Prototypes: Including but not limited to ethics in design, implementation, and use; new technologies impacting the International Roadmap for Devices and Systems (IRDS); cybersecurity in future computing systems.

 


Submission​ ​Guidelines

ICRC is a multidisciplinary forum, spanning materials and devices through computer architectures, algorithms, and applications. As such, we are adopting multiple tracks that are meant to reflect different common practices in the fields of interest to ICRC. Please select from the following formats that best fits with your content:

  • Long Papers (10 pages): These papers should present novel, impactful, and original research pertaining to any of the above topics of interest. If accepted, they will be featured as full talks and included in the conference proceedings. The page limit includes references and all supporting material.
  • Short Papers (5 pages): These papers should present preliminary results pertaining to any of the above topics of interest. If accepted, they will be featured as short talks and included in the conference proceedings. The page limit includes references and all supporting material.
  • Extended Abstracts (1 page): These submissions should present an idea, position, or salient results in any of the above topics of interest. They need not present original research. If accepted, these will be featured as short talks but NOT included in the conference proceedings. The page limit includes references and all supporting material.
  • Special Session Proposals (2 pages): The special session proposals can include workshops, tutorials, panels, birds of a feather sessions, or demonstrations on any of the above topics of interest. These sessions need not present original research. The special sessions will last for 1-2 hours. They will not be included in the conference proceedings. The page limit includes references and all supporting material.

Proceedings and Templates

  • Final version of all accepted papers will be included in the Proceedings on IEEE-Xplore
  • All submissions must be formatted in the IEEE Conference Template, available on the IEEE Website or Overleaf
  • Papers can be submitted at EasyChair: [Link Coming Soon]