Journal: Communications of the ACM

Volume 58, Issue 9

5 -- 0Joseph A. Konstan, Jack W. Davidson. Should conferences meet journals and where?: a proposal for 'PACM'
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. On (computing) artifacts
8 -- 9. May the computational force be with you
10 -- 11John Arquilla. Moving beyond the cold war
12 -- 14Neil Savage. Split second
15 -- 16Gregory Mone. Sensing emotions
17 -- 19Logan Kugler. New news aggregator apps
20 -- 27Thomas Haigh, Mark Priestley. Innovators assemble: Ada Lovelace, Walter Isaacson, and the superheroines of computing
28 -- 30Joe Karaganis, Jennifer Urban. The rise of the robo notice
31 -- 33Dorothea Kleine. The value of social theories for global computing
34 -- 36Peter J. Denning. Automated education and the professional
37 -- 39Jeffrey D. Ullman. Experiments as research validation: have we gone too far?
40 -- 42Michael Mitzenmacher. Theory without experiments: have we gone too far?
43 -- 44Kathryn S. McKinley. The pros and cons of the 'PACM' proposal: point
44 -- 45David S. Rosenblum. The pros and cons of the 'PACM' proposal: counterpoint
46 -- 53Spence Green, Jeffrey Heer, Christopher D. Manning. Natural language translation at the intersection of AI and HCI
54 -- 58Philip Maddox. Testing a distributed system
60 -- 71Simha Sethumadhavan, Adam Waksman, Matthew Suozzo, Yipeng Huang, Julianna Eum. Trustworthy hardware from untrusted components
72 -- 81Ignacio Laguna, Dong H. Ahn, Bronis R. de Supinski, Todd Gamblin, Gregory L. Lee, Martin Schulz, Saurabh Bagchi, Milind Kulkarni, Bowen Zhou, Zhezhe Chen, Feng Qin. Debugging high-performance computing applications at massive scales
82 -- 90Tanmoy Chakraborty 0002, Suhansanu Kumar, Pawan Goyal, Niloy Ganguly, Animesh Mukherjee. On the categorization of scientific citation profiles in computer science
92 -- 103Ernest Davis, Gary Marcus. Commonsense reasoning and commonsense knowledge in artificial intelligence
104 -- 113Aviv Zohar. Bitcoin: under the hood
115 -- 0Marc Alexa. A woodworker's easy fix: technical perspective
116 -- 124Nobuyuki Umetani, Takeo Igarashi, Niloy J. Mitra. Guided exploration of physically valid shapes for furniture design
128 -- 0Leah Hoffmann. Q&A: A Passion for Pairings

Volume 58, Issue 8

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. Why doesn't ACM have a SIG for theoretical computer science?
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Invention
8 -- 9. Not so easy to forget
10 -- 11Mark Guzdial. Plain talk on computing education
13 -- 15Esther Shein. Teaching computers with illusions
16 -- 18Logan Kugler. Touching the virtual
19 -- 20Keith Kirkpatrick. The moral challenges of driverless cars
21 -- 23David Kotz, Kevin Fu, Carl A. Gunter, Aviel D. Rubin. Security for mobile and cloud frontiers in healthcare
24 -- 26Henry Chesbrough, Marshall Van Alstyne. Permissionless innovation
27 -- 28George V. Neville-Neil. Hickory dickory doc
29 -- 32Susanne E. Hambrusch, Ran Libeskind-Hadas, Eric Aaron. Understanding the U.S. domestic computer science Ph.D. pipeline
33 -- 35Leen-Kiat Soh, Duane F. Shell, Elizabeth Ingraham, Stephen Ramsay, Brian Moore 0002. Learning through computational creativity
36 -- 43Arie van Deursen. Testing web applications with state objects
44 -- 51Daniel C. Wang. From the EDVAC to WEBVACs
52 -- 61Benoît Valiron, Neil J. Ross, Peter Selinger, D. Scott Alexander, Jonathan M. Smith. Programming the quantum future
62 -- 69Petra Saskia Bayerl, Babak Akhgar. Surveillance and falsification implications for open source intelligence investigations
70 -- 75Rua-Huan Tsaih, David C. Yen, Yu-Chien Chang. Challenges deploying complex technologies in a traditional organization
76 -- 82Thanassis Tiropanis, Wendy Hall, Jon Crowcroft, Noshir S. Contractor, Leandros Tassiulas. Network science, web science, and internet science
84 -- 0Aniket Kittur. Corralling crowd power: technical perspective
85 -- 94Michael S. Bernstein, Greg Little, Robert C. Miller, Björn Hartmann, Mark S. Ackerman, David R. Karger, David Crowell, Katrina Panovich. Soylent: a word processor with a crowd inside
96 -- 0Dennis Shasha. Upstart puzzles

Volume 58, Issue 7

4 -- 5Alexander L. Wolf. A new chief executive officer and executive director of ACM
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Milestones
8 -- 9. Quality vs. quantity in faculty publications
12 -- 13John Arquilla, Duncan A. Buell. The dangers of military robots, the risks of online voting
14 -- 16Chris Edwards. Growing pains for deep learning
17 -- 19Gregory Goth. Bringing big data to the big tent
20 -- 21Gregory Mone. The new smart cities
22 -- 23Lawrence M. Fisher. ACM announces 2014 award recipients
24 -- 26Pamela Samuelson. Anti-circumvention rules limit reverse engineering
27 -- 28L. Jean Camp. Respecting people and respecting privacy
29 -- 31David Anderson. Preserving the digital record of computing history
32 -- 34Phillip G. Armour. An updated software Almanac
35 -- 38Juan E. Gilbert, Jerlando F. L. Jackson, Edward C. Dillon Jr., LaVar J. Charleston. African Americans in the U.S. computing sciences workforce
39 -- 41Vijay Kumar, Thomas A. Kalil. The future of computer science and engineering is in your hands
42 -- 50Andrew Brook. Low-latency distributed applications in finance
51 -- 55Phelim Dowling, Kevin McGrath. Using free and open source tools to manage software quality
56 -- 68Daniel A. Reed, Jack Dongarra. Exascale computing and big data
69 -- 77Alexander Hogenboom, Flavius Frasincar, Franciska de Jong, Uzay Kaymak. Using rhetorical structure in sentiment analysis
78 -- 87Joseph Bonneau, Cormac Herley, Paul C. van Oorschot, Frank Stajano. Passwords and the evolution of imperfect authentication
88 -- 97Stuart J. Russell. Unifying logic and probability
100 -- 0William D. Clinger. The simplicity of cache efficient functional algorithms: technical perspective
101 -- 108Guy E. Blelloch, Robert Harper. Cache efficient functional algorithms
112 -- 0Brian Clegg. Future Tense: Toy Box Earth

Volume 58, Issue 6

5 -- 0John White. Thank you..
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. A celebration of accomplishments
8 -- 9. To learn CS principles, start in the cafeteria line
10 -- 11Mark Guzdial. Bringing evidence-based education to CS
12 -- 14Neil Savage. Plenty of proteins
15 -- 17Samuel Greengard. Between the lines
18 -- 20Gary Anthes. Estonia: a model for e-government
21 -- 0Andreas Reuter. Klaus Tschira: 1940-2015
22 -- 23Neil Savage. Forging relationships
24 -- 27Vishal Misra. Routing money, not packets
28 -- 31Peter J. Denning. Emergent innovation
32 -- 33George V. Neville-Neil. Lazarus code
34 -- 35Meg Leta Jones. Forgetting made (too) easy
36 -- 38Yannis Papakonstantinou. Created computed universe
39 -- 43Vinton G. Cerf. An interview with U.S. chief technology officer Megan Smith
44 -- 47Kate Matsudaira. The science of managing data science
48 -- 53Stepán Davidovic, Kavita Guliani. Reliable Cron across the planet
54 -- 60Reza Zafarani, Huan Liu. Evaluation without ground truth in social media research
61 -- 70Kurt Jensen, Lars Michael Kristensen. Colored Petri nets: a graphical language for formal modeling and validation of concurrent systems
71 -- 76Leslie Lamport. Turing lecture: The computer science of concurrency: the early years
78 -- 89Mark Berman, Piet Demeester, Jae-Woo Lee, Kiran Nagaraja, Michael Zink, Didier Colle, Dilip Kumar Krishnappa, Dipankar Raychaudhuri, Henning Schulzrinne, Ivan Seskar, Sachin Sharma. Future internets escape the simulator
92 -- 0Patrick Baudisch. Virtual reality in your living room: technical perspective
93 -- 100Brett R. Jones, Hrvoje Benko, Eyal Ofek, Andrew D. Wilson. IllumiRoom: immersive experiences beyond the TV screen
104 -- 0Leah Hoffmann. Q&A: The Path to Clean Data

Volume 58, Issue 5

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. Incentivizing quality and impact in computing research
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Cascade failure
8 -- 9. Abolish software warranty disclaimers
10 -- 11Joel Adams, Daniel A. Reed. Introducing young women to CS, and supporting advanced research environments
12 -- 14Logan Kugler. Is "good enough" computing good enough?
15 -- 17Keith Kirkpatrick. Putting the data science into journalism
18 -- 19Gregory Mone. Robots with a human touch
20 -- 23Michael Schrage, Marshall Van Alstyne. Life of IP
24 -- 26Sally Fincher. What are we doing when we teach computing in schools?
27 -- 29Christopher Jon Sprigman. Oracle v. Google: a high-stakes legal fight for the software industry
30 -- 31Thomas Ball, Benjamin G. Zorn. Teach foundational language principles
32 -- 35Serge Abiteboul, Benjamin André, Daniel Kaplan. Managing your digital life
36 -- 41Justin Sheehy. There is no now
42 -- 47Spencer Rathbun. Parallel processing with <code>promises</code>
48 -- 55Sören Preibusch. Privacy behaviors after Snowden
56 -- 62Roli Varma, Deepak Kapur. Decoding femininity in computer science in India
64 -- 74Jean-Paul Laumond, Nicolas Mansard, Jean-Bernard Lasserre. Optimization as motion selection principle in robot action
76 -- 0James R. Larus. Programming multicore computers: technical perspective
77 -- 86Nadathur Satish, Changkyu Kim, Jatin Chhugani, Hideki Saito, Rakesh Krishnaiyer, Mikhail Smelyanskiy, Milind Girkar, Pradeep Dubey. Can traditional programming bridge the ninja performance gap for parallel computing applications?
88 -- 0Dennis Shasha. Upstart Puzzles: Strategic Friendship

Volume 58, Issue 4

5 -- 0Joseph A. Konstan, Jack W. Davidson. Charting the future: scholarly publishing in CS
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. The human touch
8 -- 9. Human or machine?
12 -- 13John Langford, Mark Guzdial. The arbitrariness of reviews, and advice for school administrators
15 -- 17Alex Wright. Molecular moonshots
18 -- 20Chris Edwards. Secure-system designers strive to stem data leaks
21 -- 23Mark Broderick. What's the price now?
24 -- 26Dorothy E. Denning. Toward more secure software
27 -- 29Mari Sako. Competing in emerging markets
30 -- 32George V. Neville-Neil. Raw networking
33 -- 37Len Shustek. An interview with Juris Hartmanis
38 -- 41Leslie Lamport. Who builds a house without drawing blueprints?
42 -- 45Paul Vixie. Go static or go home
46 -- 55Neil J. Gunther, Paul Puglia, Kristofer Tomasette. Hadoop superlinear scalability
56 -- 65Philip R. Cohen, Edward C. Kaiser, M. Cecelia Buchanan, Scott Lind, Michael J. Corrigan, R. Matthews Wesson. Sketch-Thru-Plan: a multimodal interface for command and control
66 -- 73Chris Newcombe, Tim Rath, Fan Zhang, Bogdan Munteanu, Marc Brooker, Michael Deardeuff. How Amazon web services uses formal methods
74 -- 82Johannes Sametinger, Jerzy W. Rozenblit, Roman L. Lysecky, Peter Ott. Security challenges for medical devices
84 -- 0Trevor N. Mudge. The specialization trend in computer hardware: techincal perspective
85 -- 93Wajahat Qadeer, Rehan Hameed, Ofer Shacham, Preethi Venkatesan, Christos Kozyrakis, Mark Horowitz. Convolution engine: balancing efficiency and flexibility in specialized computing
96 -- 0David Allen Batchelor. Future Tense: The Wealth of Planets

Volume 58, Issue 3

5 -- 0Wayne Graves. Raising ACM's Digital Library
6 -- 0. Make abstracts communicate results
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. 'As we may think'
8 -- 9Valerie Barr, Mark Guzdial. Advice on teaching CS, and the learnability of programming languages
13 -- 15Keith Kirkpatrick. Automating organic synthesis
16 -- 18Tom Geller. Car talk
19 -- 21Esther Shein. Python for beginners
22 -- 24Pamela Samuelson. Copyrightability of Java APIs revisited
25 -- 27Thomas J. Cortina. Reaching a broader population of students through "unplugged" activities
28 -- 30Peter J. Denning, Edward E. Gordon. A technician shortage
31 -- 33John Leslie King. Humans in computing: growing responsibilities for researchers
34 -- 36Shriram Krishnamurthi, Jan Vitek. The real software crisis: repeatability as a core value
37 -- 39Maarten Bullynck, Edgar G. Daylight, Liesbeth De Mol. Why did computer science make a hero out of Turing?
40 -- 42Poul-Henning Kamp. HTTP/2.0: the IETF is phoning it in
43 -- 48Dave Long. META II: digital vellum in the digital scriptorium
50 -- 57Stephen J. Andriole. Who owns IT?
58 -- 67Ashwin Machanavajjhala, Daniel Kifer. Designing statistical privacy for your data
68 -- 77Timothy Libert. Privacy implications of health information seeking on the web
80 -- 0Edward H. Adelson. Image processing goes back to basics: technical perspective
81 -- 91Sylvain Paris, Samuel W. Hasinoff, Jan Kautz. Local Laplacian filters: edge-aware image processing with a Laplacian pyramid
96 -- 0Leah Hoffmann. Q&A

Volume 58, Issue 2

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. Is information technology destroying the middle class?
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. There is nothing new under the sun
8 -- 9. Software engineering, like electrical engineering
12 -- 13Mark Guzdial. What's the best way to teach computer science to beginners?
15 -- 17Neil Savage. Visualizing sound
18 -- 20Logan Kugler. Online privacy: regional differences
21 -- 23Keith Kirkpatrick. Using technology to help people
24 -- 26Carl E. Landwehr. We need a building code for building code
27 -- 29Ming Zeng. Three paradoxes of building platforms
30 -- 33Peter G. Neumann. Far-sighted thinking about deleterious computer-related events
34 -- 36Diana Franklin. Putting the computer science in computing education research
37 -- 39George V. Neville-Neil. Too big to fail
40 -- 43Armando Fox, David A. Patterson. Do-it-yourself textbook publishing
44 -- 46Benjamin Livshits, Manu Sridharan, Yannis Smaragdakis, Ondrej Lhoták, José Nelson Amaral, Bor-Yuh Evan Chang, Samuel Z. Guyer, Uday P. Khedker, Anders Møller, Dimitrios Vardoulakis. In defense of soundiness: a manifesto
48 -- 51Harlan Stenn. Securing network time protocol
52 -- 56Robert V. Binder, Bruno Legeard, Anne Kramer. Model-based testing: where does it stand?
58 -- 64Carlos Juiz, Mark Toomey. To govern IT, or not to govern IT?
65 -- 72Dalal Alrajeh, Jeff Kramer, Alessandra Russo, Sebastián Uchitel. Automated support for diagnosis and repair
74 -- 84Michael Walfish, Andrew J. Blumberg. Verifying computations without reexecuting them
86 -- 0Thomas A. Henzinger, Jean-François Raskin. The equivalence problem for finite automata: technical perspective
87 -- 95Filippo Bonchi, Damien Pous. Hacking nondeterminism with induction and coinduction
104 -- 0Dennis Shasha. Upstart Puzzles: Take Your Seats

Volume 58, Issue 12

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. On lethal autonomous weapons
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Advancing the ACM agenda
8 -- 9. What about statistical relational learning?
10 -- 11Moshe Y. Vardi, Mark Guzdial. What do we do when the jobs are gone, and why we must embrace active learning
12 -- 14Don Monroe. When data is not enough
15 -- 16Gregory Mone. The hyper-intelligent bandage
17 -- 19Keith Kirkpatrick. Technology brings online education in line with campus programs
20 -- 23David Anderson. The digital dark age
24 -- 26Peter J. Denning, Nicholas Dew. Why our theories of innovation fail us
27 -- 29Nancy Tuana. Coupled ethical-epistemic analysis in teaching ethics
30 -- 32George V. Neville-Neil. Pickled patches
33 -- 36Richard E. Ladner, Sheryl Burgstahler. Increasing the participation of individuals with disabilities in computing
37 -- 40Jeremy Scott, Alan Bundy. Creating a new generation of computational thinkers
41 -- 42Cory Doctorow. I can't let you do that, Dave
43 -- 45Stephen Goose. The case for banning killer robots: point
46 -- 47Ronald C. Arkin. The case for banning killer robots: counterpoint
48 -- 55Olivia Angiuli, Joe Blitzstein, Jim Waldo. How to de-identify your data
56 -- 58Kate Matsudaira. Lean software development: building and shipping two versions
59 -- 66Fabien Gaud, Baptiste Lepers, Justin R. Funston, Mohammad Dashti, Alexandra Fedorova, Vivien Quéma, Renaud Lachaize, Mark Roth. Challenges of memory management on modern NUMA systems
68 -- 74Andrea Ballatore, Michela Bertolotto. Personalizing maps
75 -- 84Philip Wadler. Propositions as types
86 -- 93Soumya Sen, Carlee Joe-Wong, Sangtae Ha, Mung Chiang. Smart data pricing: using economics to manage network congestion
94 -- 100Robert E. Kraut, Moira Burke. Internet use and psychological well-being: effects of activity and audience
102 -- 0Noah Snavely. Technical Perspective: Paris Beyond Frommer's
103 -- 110Carl Doersch, Saurabh Singh, Abhinav Gupta, Josef Sivic, Alexei A. Efros. What makes Paris look like Paris?
111 -- 0David Maier. Technical Perspective: In-Situ Database Management
112 -- 121Ioannis Alagiannis, Renata Borovica-Gajic, Miguel Branco, Stratos Idreos, Anastasia Ailamaki. NoDB: efficient query execution on raw data files
136 -- 0Leah Hoffmann. Q&A: Redefining Architectures

Volume 58, Issue 11

5 -- 0Bobby Schnabel. A tale of ACM visions
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. Memory with a twist
8 -- 9. Who will read PACM?
10 -- 11Valerie Barr, Michael Stonebraker. How men can help women in CS; winning 'computing's Nobel prize'
12 -- 14Alex Wright. Algorithmic authors
15 -- 17Esther Shein. Companies proactively seek out internal threats
18 -- 20Chris Edwards. Brain science helps computers separate speakers in a crowded room
21 -- 0. John H. Holland 1929-2015
24 -- 26Steven B. Lipner. Security assurance
27 -- 29Pamela Samuelson. Software patents are falling down
30 -- 32Muhammad Zia Hydari, Rahul Telang, William M. Marella. Electronic health records and patient safety
33 -- 35Pratim Sengupta, Amanda Dickes, Amy Voss Farris, Ashlyn Karan, David Martin, Mason Wright. Programming in K-12 science classrooms
36 -- 40Len Shustek. An interview with Fred Brooks
41 -- 42Rafael A. Calvo, Dorian Peters, Sidney K. D'Mello. When technologies manipulate our emotions
44 -- 49Ben Maurer. Fail at scale
50 -- 54Tyler Mcmullen. It probably works
55 -- 61Taylor Savage. Componentizing the web
62 -- 73Dafna Shahaf, Carlos Guestrin, Eric Horvitz, Jure Leskovec. Information cartography
74 -- 79So-Hyun Lee, Hee-Woong Kim. Why people post benevolent and malicious comments online
80 -- 89Chenyan Xu, Yang Yu, Chun-Keung Hoi. Hidden in-game intelligence in NBA players' tweets
90 -- 99Sumit Gulwani, José Hernández-Orallo, Emanuel Kitzelmann, Stephen H. Muggleton, Ute Schmid, Benjamin G. Zorn. Inductive programming meets the real world
102 -- 0Frédo Durand. Technical Perspective: The Path to Light Transport
103 -- 111Wenzel Jakob, Steve Marschner. Geometric tools for exploring manifolds of light transport paths
112 -- 0George Varghese. Technical Perspective: Treating Networks Like Programs
113 -- 121Mihai Dobrescu, Katerina J. Argyraki. Software dataplane verification
136 -- 0Dennis Shasha. Upstart Puzzles: Auction Triplets

Volume 58, Issue 10

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. What can be done about gender diversity in computing?: a lot!
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. The Third Heidelberg Laureate Forum
10 -- 11. Ban 'naked' braces!
12 -- 13John Arquilla, Daniel A. Reed. The morality of online war; the fates of data analytics, HPC
15 -- 17Gary Anthes. Scientists update views of light
18 -- 20Samuel Greengard. Automotive systems get smarter
21 -- 23Keith Kirkpatrick. Cyber policies on the rise
24 -- 26Harold Abelson, Ross J. Anderson, Steven M. Bellovin, Josh Benaloh, Matt Blaze, Whitfield Diffie, John Gilmore, Matthew Green, Susan Landau, Peter G. Neumann, Ronald L. Rivest, Jeffrey I. Schiller, Bruce Schneier, Michael A. Specter, Daniel J. Weitzner. Keys under doormats
27 -- 28Michael A. Cusumano. In defense of IBM
29 -- 31George V. Neville-Neil. Storming the cubicle
32 -- 34Phillip G. Armour. Thinking thoughts
35 -- 37Thomas J. Misa. Computing is history
38 -- 40Thomas G. Dietterich, Eric Horvitz. Rise of concerns about AI: reflections and directions
41 -- 44Phillip Compeau, Pavel A. Pevzner. Life after MOOCs
46 -- 51Thanumalayan Sankaranarayana Pillai, Vijay Chidambaram, Ramnatthan Alagappan, Samer Al-Kiswany, Andrea C. Arpaci-Dusseau, Remzi H. Arpaci-Dusseau. Crash consistency
52 -- 57Rich Harris. Dismantling the barriers to entry
58 -- 69Joan Feigenbaum, Bryan Ford. Seeking anonymity in an internet panopticon
70 -- 78Patricia Lago, Sedef Akinli Koçak, Ivica Crnkovic, Birgit Penzenstadler. Framing sustainability as a property of software quality
80 -- 87Eleazar Eskin. Discovering genes involved in disease and the mystery of missing heritability
90 -- 0Cleve Moler. Technical Perspective: Not just a matrix laboratory anymore
91 -- 97Lloyd N. Trefethen. Computing numerically with functions instead of numbers
104 -- 0William Sims Bainbridge. Future Tense: Processional

Volume 58, Issue 1

5 -- 0Moshe Y. Vardi. The rise and fall of industrial research labs
7 -- 0Vinton G. Cerf. A long way to have come and still to go
8 -- 9. Toward a map interface not inherently related to geography
11 -- 15. ACM's FY14 annual report
18 -- 19Valerie Barr, Michael Stonebraker. A valuable lesson, and whither Hadoop?
21 -- 24Erica Klarreich. In search of Bayesian inference
25 -- 27Samuel Greengard. Smart transportation networks drive gains
28 -- 30Gary Anthes. Data brokers are watching you
31 -- 0Lawrence M. Fisher. Google Boosts ACM's Turing award prize to $1 million
32 -- 34Michael A. Cusumano. How traditional firms must compete in the sharing economy
35 -- 37Lee A. Bygrave. A right to be forgotten?
38 -- 39Phillip G. Armour. A little queue theory
40 -- 44Thomas Haigh. The tears of Donald Knuth
45 -- 47Reza Rawassizadeh, Blaine A. Price, Marian Petre. Wearables: has the age of smartwatches finally arrived?
48 -- 51Hermann Maurer. Does the internet make us stupid?
52 -- 53Silvio Micali. What it means to receive the Turing award
54 -- 61Rick Richardson. Disambiguating databases
62 -- 65Geetanjali Sampemane. Internal access controls
66 -- 74Davidlohr Bueso. Scalability techniques for practical synchronization primitives
76 -- 85Virender Singh, Alicia Perdigones, José Luis García, Ignacio Cañas-Guerroro, Fernando R. Mazarrón. Analyzing worldwide research in hardware architecture, 1997-2011
86 -- 92Tuukka Ruotsalo, Giulio Jacucci, Petri Myllymäki, Samuel Kaski. Interactive intent modeling: information discovery beyond search
94 -- 102Saket Navlakha, Ziv Bar-Joseph. Distributed information processing in biological and computational systems
104 -- 0Ravi Nair. Big data needs approximate computing: technical perspective
105 -- 115Hadi Esmaeilzadeh, Adrian Sampson, Luis Ceze, Doug Burger. Neural acceleration for general-purpose approximate programs
128 -- 0William Sims Bainbridge. Future tense