Call for papers

TAIC PART is a testing workshop that aims to forge collaboration between industry and academia on the challenging and exciting problem of software testing. It is sponsored by representatives of both industry and academia, bringing together commercial and industrial software developers and users with academic researchers working on the theory and practice of software testing.

The workshop will be held at Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Great Park, UK, 29th - 31st August, 2006.

Cumberland Lodge is a former royal residence given to the nation in 1946 by the late Queen Mother. It is an ideal setting for a productive and enjoyable conference, providing world-class conference facilities in an ideal location, which resonates with centuries of historical significance, dating back to the mid 17th century.

Authors are invited to submit papers describing original research, experience, tools or industrial "challenges" in testing.

Research topics include (but are not limited to):

Experience papers should describe industrial experience applying testing techniques and/or tools to commercial projects or open source solutions; the problems tackled and the results.

Tools papers should describe novel developments in environments and systems of potential benefit to the testing community.

Industrial "challenge" papers should have at least one author whose affiliation is non-academic and should describe an example of a real-world software testing problem, for which help is sought from the academic research community. Such papers should set out the problem, the goal of testing for this problem area and the way in which the success or otherwise of a proposed solution will be assessed. One goal of the workshop will be to create on-going partnerships which will seek to solve these industrial challenges.

The full proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society. Materials for the proceedings should be typeset to conform to IEEE conference style guidelines. There is a page limit for all submissions. For research papers this is 10 pages in IEEE conference style format. For "challenge", "tools" and "experience" submissions the page limit is 5 pages in IEEE conference style format.

There will be a special issue of the Software Testing, Verification and Reliability (STVR) journal containing extended versions of selected papers from TAIC PART 2006.

The workshop will include a half-day PhD program. The goal of the half-day PhD program is to provide a supportive yet questioning setting in which students can present their work. Students will be able to discuss their goals, methods, and results at an early stage in their research. The PhD program aims to provide useful guidance for completion of the dissertation research and initiation of a research career.
Students should consider participating in the PhD program after having settled on a research area or dissertation topic. Submissions should be in the form of a research abstract and submitted to the website as for other papers. This should be a maximum of 4 pages long in IEEE conference style format. Abstracts will be reviewed separately from the other types of submission, but are subject to the same deadlines. Abstracts should aim to cover: the technical problem to be solved with a justification of its importance, an account of related work explaining why this has not solved the problem, the research hypothesis or claim, a sketch of the proposed solution and the expected contributions of your dissertation research. Participants will be selected using the following criteria: the potential quality of the research and its relevance to software testing, quality of the research abstract, stage of the research (students will be selected across a range of research stages) and the applicability of the research area to industry. Students selected to attend will be asked to present a talk about their work and their research abstracts will appear in the proceedings. For more information, contact David Willmor, email: d.willmor@cs.manchester.ac.uk.

Keynote Speakers

Important Dates

General Chair: Professor Mark Harman, King's College London

Program Chair: Dr Phil McMinn, University of Sheffield

Local Arrangements Chair: Zheng Li, King's College London

PhD Program Chair: David Willmor, University of Manchester

Sponsors include: The EPSRC, DaimlerChrysler, Ericsson, IPL Bath, LDRA, Motorola and Vizuri Ltd.