The ACM Joint European Software Engineering Conference and Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering

ESEC/FSE 2018


Software Systems



We invite high quality submissions describing original and unpublished results of theoretical, empirical, conceptual, and experimental software engineering research. Contributions should describe innovative and significant original research. Papers describing groundbreaking approaches to emerging problems will also be considered. Submissions that facilitate reproducibility by using available data sets or making the described tools publicly available are especially encouraged.
Papers submitted to ESEC/FSE should not have been already published elsewhere and should not be under review or submitted for review elsewhere during the reviewing period. Specifically, authors are required to adhere to the ACM Policy and Procedures on Plagiarism and the ACM Policy on Prior Publication and Simultaneous Submissions.
Important Dates
Full paper submission date · March 9th, 2018
Rebuttal period: May 7th-10th
Notification date: June 11th
Camera ready date: July 31st
Conference · November 4th-9th, 2018
Important: Note that the official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of ESEC/FSE 2018. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.
At least one author of each accepted paper must register and present the paper at ESEC/FSE 2018 in order for the paper to be published in the proceedings. One-day registrations do NOT satisfy the registration requirement. Please carefully read the complete list of ESEC/FSE Submission Policies and Policies for Accepted Contributions.
Topics of Interest
We are interested in submissions from both industry and academia on all topics related to software engineering. These include, but are not limited to:
Architecture and design
Autonomic computing and (self-)adaptive systems
Big data
Cloud computing
Components, services, and middleware
Computer-supported cooperative work
Configuration management and deployment
Crowdsourcing
Debugging
Dependability, safety, and reliability
Development tools and environments
Distributed, parallel, and concurrent software
Education
Embedded and real-time software
Empirical software engineering
End-user software engineering
Formal methods, including languages, methods, and tools
Green computing
Human and social factors in software engineering
Human-computer interaction
Knowledge-based software engineering
Mobile, ubiquitous, and pervasive software
Model-driven software engineering
Patterns and frameworks
Processes and workflows
Program analysis
Program comprehension and visualization
Program synthesis
Refactoring
Requirements engineering
Reverse engineering
Safety-critical systems
Scientific computing
Search-based software engineering
Security and privacy
Software economics and metrics
Software evolution and maintenance
Software modularity
Software product lines
Software reuse
Software services
Testing
Traceability
Web-based software
How to Submit
At the time of submission all papers must conform to the ESEC/FSE 2018 Format and Submission Guidelines, and must not exceed 10 pages for all text and figures plus 2 pages for references (with an abstract of 250 words max). All submissions must be in English and in PDF format. Submissions that do not comply with the above instructions will be desk rejected without review. Papers must be submitted electronically through the ESEC/FSE submission site.
Each submission will be reviewed by at least three members of the Program Committee. Authors will have an opportunity to respond to reviews during a rebuttal period. Submissions will be evaluated on the basis of originality, importance of contribution, soundness, evaluation, quality of presentation and appropriate comparison to related work. The program committee as a whole will make final decisions about which submissions to accept for presentation at the conference.
ESEC/FSE 2018 will employ a lightweight double-blind review process. The papers submitted must not reveal the authors’ identities in any way:
Authors should leave out author names and affiliations from the body of their submission.
Authors should ensure that any citation to related work by themselves is written in third person, that is, “the prior work of XYZ” as opposed to “our prior work”.
Authors should avoid providing URLs to author-revealing sites (tools, data sets). The paper can mention the existence of such sites, but the visit of such sites should not be needed to conduct the review.
Authors should anonymize author-revealing company names, yet can provide general characteristics of the organizations involved needed to understand the context of the paper.
Once all reviews are in, author identities will be revealed to the program committee, and authors can respond to the reviews. Authors thus can also use their responses to provide additional information that would otherwise be author-revealing, thus allowing reviewers to take this extra information into account in the eventual evaluation.
Authors having further questions on double blind reviewing are encouraged to contact the Program Chairs by email. Papers that do not comply to the double blind review process will be desk-rejected.
All publications are subject to the ACM Author Representations policy.