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FAST '10

WORKSHOP PROGRAM

All sessions will take place in the Crystal Room unless otherwise noted.

Session papers are available to workshop registrants immediately and to everyone beginning February 22, 2010.

Check back for updates to the schedule. N.B. Each short paper is allocated 20 minutes for presentation; each long paper is allocated 30 minutes for presentation.

Monday, February 22, 2010
8:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m.    Continental Breakfast, Gold & Crystal Foyer
9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m.

Invited Talk

Naming, Identity, and Provenance
Jim Waldo, Distinguished Engineer, Sun Microsystems Laboratories

View the presentation slides

10:00 a.m.–10:15 a.m.    Break
10:15 a.m.–11:50 a.m.

Security and Experience

Session Chair: Susan Davidson, University of Pennsylania

Trusted Computing and Provenance: Better Together (long paper)
John Lyle and Andrew Martin, Oxford University Computing Laboratory

Paper in PDF | Slides

Towards a Secure and Efficient System for End-to-End Provenance (short paper)
Patrick McDaniel, Kevin Butler, and Stephen McLaughlin, Pennsylvania State University; Radu Sion and Erez Zadok, Stony Brook University; Marianne Winslett, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Paper in PDF | Slides

Towards Query Interoperability: PASSing PLUS (long paper)
Uri J. Braun and Margo I. Seltzer, Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences; Adriane Chapman, Barbara Blaustein, M. David Allen, and Len Seligman, The MITRE Corporation

Paper in PDF | Slides

Provenance Artifact Identification in the Atmospheric Composition Processing System (ACPS) (short paper)
Curt Tilmes, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Yelena Yesha and Milton Halem, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Paper in PDF | Slides

11:50 a.m.–1:30 p.m.    Workshop Luncheon, Crystal Room
1:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m.

Invited Talk

Provenance for the Nationwide Health Information Network
Latanya Sweeney, Distinguished Career Professor of Computer Science, Technology, and Policy, CMU, Director of the CMU Privacy Laboratory, Visiting Scholar at the Harvard Center for Research on Computation and Society

View the presentation slides

2:30 p.m.–3:40 p.m.

Systems and Uses of Provenance

Session Chair: Adriane Chapman, The MITRE Corporation

Panda: A System for Provenance and Data (short paper)
Robert Ikeda and Jennifer Widom, Stanford University

Paper in PDF | Slides

Towards Practical Incremental Recomputation for Scientists: An Implementation for the Python Language (long paper)
Philip J. Guo and Dawson Engler, Stanford University

Paper in PDF | Slides

Using Provenance to Extract Semantic File Attributes (short paper)
Daniel Margo and Robin Smogor, Harvard University

Paper in PDF | Slides

3:40 p.m.–4:00 p.m.    Break
4:00 p.m.–5:50 p.m.

Models: New and Different Ways of Thinking About and Reasoning About Provenance

Session Chair: Todd J. Green, University of California, Davis

A Graph Model of Data and Workflow Provenance (long paper)
Umut Acar, Max-Planck Institute for Software Systems; Peter Buneman and James Cheney, University of Edinburgh; Jan Van den Bussche and Natalia Kwasnikowska, Hasselt University; Stijn Vansummeren, Université Libre de Bruxelles

Paper in PDF | Slides

A Conceptual Model and Predicate Language for Data Selection and Projection Based on Provenance (long paper)
David W. Archer and Lois M.L. Delcambre, Portland State University

Paper in PDF | Slides

On the Use of Abstract Workflows to Capture Scientific Process Provenance (long paper)
Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, Leonardo Salayandia, Nicholas Del Rio, and Ann Q. Gates, University of Texas at El Paso

Paper in PDF | Slides

Provenance-based Belief (short paper)
Adriane Chapman, Barbara Blaustein, and Chris Elsaesser, The MITRE Corporation

Paper in PDF | Slides

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Last changed: 5 May 2010 jel