— DSAL'10 — Program — Call For Papers — Organizers —
Tom Dinkelaker (Darmstadt University, Germany)
Tom Dinkelaker is a fifth-year PhD student with a research focus on the implementation of embedded domain-specific languages, aspect-oriented programming languages, and open language semantics. Being involved in the European Network of Excellence on Aspect-Oriented Software Development (AOSD-Europe) and the German research project on Feature-Driven, Aspect-Oriented and Model-Driven Software Product Line Development (feasiPLe), he is developing technology for building domain-specific aspect languages with support for extensible syntax and semantics using reflective programming techniques. He was the general organizer of the 1st Workshop on Model-Driven Product Line Engineering at the European Conference on Model-Driven Architecture Foundations and Applications (ECMDA'09). He was a supporting reviewer for the FSE and AOSD conference series. He holds a German Diploma in computer science from the Technische Universitaet Darmstadt, Germany (2005).
Johan Fabry (University of Chile, Chile)
Johan Fabry is an assistant professor in the PLEIAD laboratory of the computer science department of the University of Chile. His main research interests are the use of AOSD in building distributed systems, the design and implementation of domain-specific aspect languages and the impact of DSALS on aspect composition and interaction. Further research interests include the design of pointcut languages and weaver implementations. He was co-organizer of the Workshops on Domain-Specific Aspect Languages at GPCE'06, AOSD'07, '08 and '09 , co-organizer of the workshops on Aspects, Dependencies, and Interactions at ECOOP'06, '07, and '08 and is editor of the special issue “Dependencies and Interactions With Aspects” of the journal Transactions in Aspect-Oriented Software Development.
Anne-Francoise Le Meur (University of Lille, France)
Anne-Francoise Le Meur is an assistant professor at the University of Lille and is a member of the INRIA project-team ADAM, which aims to provide a set of concepts, paradigms, approaches, frameworks, and tools based on advanced software engineering techniques such as CBSE, AOSD, or CAC to build distributed adaptive software systems. She holds a MSc from the Oregon Graduate Institute in Portland (1999) and a PhD from the University of Rennes (2002). She has been working on program specialization and the design and development of domain-specific languages. She has co-organized the Domain-Specific Aspect Languages Workshop at GPCE'06, AOSD'07, '08 and '09. Her current work focuses mainly on the application of programming-language and modeling techniques to the problem of software component-based architecture evolution.
Jacques Noye (Ecole des Mines de Nantes, France)
Jacques Noye is an assistant professor at Ecole de Mines de Nantes and a member of ASCOLA (ASpect and COmposition LAnguages) a joint project-team of Ecole des Mines de Nantes and INRIA. He is interested in many aspects of programming languages and their implementation, in particular better support for programming in the large. He was a member of the organizing committee of the previous DSAL workshops and co-edited the June 2009 special issue of the IET Software Journal on DSALs. He holds a European doctoral degree in computer science from the University of Rennes (France). He worked from 1985 to 1993 at the European Computer-Industry Research Centre in Munich on many aspects of Prolog implementation, in particular, hardware support, compilation, and parallelism. From 1994 to 1996, he was, within the Compose group at Irisa in Rennes, one of the main designers of Tempo, a partial evaluator for C.
Eric Tanter (University of Chile, Chile)
Éric Tanter is assistant professor at the University of Chile, in the PLEIAD laboratory of the Computer Science Department. His research focuses on programming paradigms and languages for adaptable systems. This includes studying how language mechanisms, computational reflection, program transformation, and aspect-oriented programming can be leveraged to enhance the development of concurrent and distributed systems and tackle context awareness and adaptation. He co-organized several workshops on Ambient Intelligence and Pervasive Computing (at ECOOP and ICPS), as well as Aspect-Oriented Programming (at AOSD and GPCE). He regularly serves as PC member for SAC, Software Composition (which he co-chaired in 2008) and DAIS, among others. He is part of the PC of both ECOOP and AOSD 2010. He holds a PhD from the University of Nantes and University of Chile (2004) as well as a MSc from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (2000).