O b j e c t i v e s
The
International Conference on Computational Science 2004
(ICCS 2004) aims to bring together researchers and scientists from
mathematics and computer science as basic computing disciplines,
researchers from various application areas who are pioneering advanced
application of computational methods to sciences such as physics,
chemistry, life sciences, and engineering, arts and humanitarian
fields, along with software developers and vendors, to discuss problems
and solutions in the area, to identify new issues, and to shape
future directions for research, as well as to help industrial users
apply various advanced computational techniques.
You
are invited to submit a paper and/or a proposal to organize a workshop.
See Call for Papers for paper submission information, and Call for
workshop Proposals for more information. All accepted papers will
be printed in the conference proceedings, published by Springer-Verlag
in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. A selected number
of papers will also be published as special issues of appropriate
journals.
ICCS
2004 is the follow-up of the highly successful ICCS 2003 conference
held at a bi-location in Melbourne, Australia and St. Petersburg,
Russia, ICCS 2002 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands and ICCS 2001 in
San Francisco, USA.
ICCS 2004 in Krakow Poland, will be a unique event harvesting
the recent developments in computational grids, advanced numerical methods
and novel application fields such as complex systems, finance, econo-physics
and others.
Ever
since the first International Conference on Computational Science
in 2001 in San Francisco (USA), ICCS has attracted increasingly
more researchers involved in the challenging research field of Computational
Science. Over the last 3 years a total of more than 1500 people
attended the conference series. With a typical acceptance ratio
of 40% after peer review of the submitted papers, a total of over
1000 high quality papers have been published in proceedings by Springer
Verlag. These proceeding series have become a major intellectual
resource for computational science researchers pushing the edge
of the field. |
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