Next: Registration
Up: Call for Papers SCAM
Previous: Important Dates
  Contents
Technical Program
In keeping with the spirit and format of a workshop, SCAM will have a highly discursive nature,
with theme-based discussion tracks
and a keynote presentation, aimed at structuring and stimulating discussion.
Authors will have a 15 minute slot to present their work.
This is 10 minutes (maximum) for
talking with 5 minutes (minimum) for questions. Authors are encouraged
not to attempt to present the details of their paper in this time.
Rather, respecting the
discussion-centered goal of SCAM,
authors are encouraged to use a few slides to present points, claims,
issues and topics for discussion and to use their time allocation to attempt to
set the agenda for the ensuing discussions.
Each session has a specifically allocated discussion time at the end of the
presentations to allow for this.
The full program for the workshop is available as an
ASCII
document.
Papers accepted for the
workshop are listed in Section 9.
Mark Harman, Department of Information Systems and Computing, Brunel University, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH.