2014 Symposium and Bootcamp on the Science of Security (HotSoS)
  
  
    
                    
          Date: Apr 08, 2014 – Apr 09, 2014         
      
                    
          Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
        
      
                    
          
    
      
            The Symposium and Bootcamp on the Science of Security (HotSoS), formerly SoS Community Meeting, is a research event centered on the Science of Security. HotSoS 2014 was held April 8-9, 2014 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
The key motivation behind developing a Science of Security is to address in a principled manner the fundamental problems of security.
Security has been intensively studied, but a lot of previous research emphasizes the engineering of specific solutions without first developing the scientific understanding of the problem domain. All too often, security research conveys the flavor of identifying specific threats and removing them in an apparently ad hoc manner.
The motivation behind the nascent Science of Security is to understand how computing systems are architected, built, used, and maintained with a view to understanding and addressing security challenges systematically across their life cycle. In particular, two features distinguish the Science of Security from previous research programs on security.
- Scope. The Science of Security considers not just computational artifacts but incorporates the human, social, and organizational aspects of computing within its purview.
- Approach. The Science of Security takes a decidedly scientific approached, based on the understanding of empirical evaluation and theoretical foundations as developed in the natural and social sciences, but adapted as appropriate for the artifiial science (in Herb Simon's term) that is computing.
Following a successful invitational SoS Community Meeting in December 2012, HotSoS 2014 was the first open research event in this continuing series of such events.
Symposium proceedings will be indexed in the IEEE digital library.
Topics
Submissions are welcomed on all topics relevant to the theme of Science of Security including, but not limited to, the following (each from the perspective of the Science of Security):
- Computing architectures
- Networks
- Software engineering practices
- Models of human interaction and behavior
- Organizational models
- Evaluation methodologies
If you have any questions about the topics of submission instructions, please feel free to contact the Program Chairs, Professors David M. Nicol and Munindar P. Singh, at hotsos14@gmail.com
Emphasis on Science: Required Section in Each Submission
The key motivation behind Hot SoS is to bring out and promote the science underlying security. Therefore, we require that each submission include a section called "The Science" in which the authors should describe in what ways their contribution constitutes science. We interpret science in the broadest sense of the systematization of knowledge to uncover foundational principles through theory-driven inquiry. Thus methods reminiscent of the natural, life, social, or behavioral sciences are all acceptable. Our motivation behind asking for this section is not to impose any ideology on researchers but to give a spotlight to and thus promote the science of security.
Important Dates
Abstracts: November 8, 2013 December 4, 2013 January 3, 2014
	Submissions: November 15, 2013 December 11, 2013 January 6, 2014
	First round of reviews: January 10, 2014 February 17, 2014
	Author responses: January 15, 2014 February 20, 2014
	Decisions: February 1, 2014 February 28, 2014
	Final versions of accepted submissions: March 1, 2014 March 21, 2014
	Symposium and Bootcamp: April 8-9, 2014
Submission Instructions
Submissions must be formatted in the IEEE Conference Style and be no more than 10 pages not including bibliography and appendices, and no more than 12 pages total. We recommend the IEEE LaTeX package, IEEETran, to be used with the following options: \documentclass[10pt, conference]{IEEEtran}
Submissions must be prepared for double-blind review, that is, omit the authors names as well as any explicit indicators of the authors' identities such as referring to a past publication as "our work" or "we showed".
Submit your manuscript using Easy Chair from  here.
Submissions must not be previously published or accepted for publication and must not be submitted for publication elsewhere between the Hot SoS submission and decision dates. Prior or concurrent submission to workshops without a proceedings might be acceptable, if disclosed at the time of submission.
Organization
Organizing Committee
General Chair: Laurie A. Williams, North Carolina State University
	Program Co-Chair: David M. Nicol, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
	Program Co-Chair: Munindar P. Singh, North Carolina State University
	Web Chair: William Enck, North Carolina State University
	Publicity Chair: Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University
	Finance Chair: Lucas Layman, Fraunhofer Institute
	NSA Liason: Heather Lucas, Department of Defense
Technical Program Committee
Gul Agha, University of Illinois
	Ehab Al-Shaer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
	Bo An, Nanyang Technological University
	Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University
	Jean Camp, Indiana University
	Amit Chopra, Lancaster University
	Jedidiah Crandall, University of New Mexico
	Fabiano Dalpiaz, Utrecht University
	Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon University
	Scott DeLoach, Kansas State University
	Will Enck, North Carolina State University
	Rino Falcone, ISTC-CNR
	David Garlan, Carnegie Mellon University
	Dieter Gollmann, TU Hamburg-Harburg
	Mark Greaves, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
	Xiaohui Gu, North Carolina State University
	Somesh Jha, University of Wisconsin
	Christopher Kiekintveld, University of Texas at El Paso
	Karl Levitt, UC Davis
	Ninghui Li, Purdue University
	Emil Lupu, Imperial College
	William Martin, U.S. Department of Defense
	Christopher Mayhorn, North Carolina State University
	Ian Molloy, IBM Research
	Emerson Murphy-Hill, North Carolina State University
	Tim Norman, University of Aberdeen
	Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen
	Simon Parsons, University of Liverpool
	Wolter Pieters, Delft University of Technology
	Robert Proctor, Purdue University
	Angela Sasse, University College London
	Greg Shannon, CERT
	Kevin Sullivan, University of Virginia
	Wamberto Vasconcelos, University of Aberdeen
	Serena Villata, INRIA Sophia Antipolis
	Claire Vishik, Intel
	Tara Whalen, Carleton University
	Rebecca Wright, Rutgers University
Sponsors
- National Security Agency
- Army Research Office
- IEEE (Pending)
Hot SoS 2015
The Next Hot SoS will be April 21-22, 2015 at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
 
      
    
    
          
        Submitted by Anonymous
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The Symposium and Bootcamp on the Science of Security (HotSoS), formerly SoS Community Meeting, is a research event centered on the Science of Security. HotSoS 2014 was held April 8-9, 2014 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
The key motivation behind developing a Science of Security is to address in a principled manner the fundamental problems of security.
Security has been intensively studied, but a lot of previous research emphasizes the engineering of specific solutions without first developing the scientific understanding of the problem domain. All too often, security research conveys the flavor of identifying specific threats and removing them in an apparently ad hoc manner.
The motivation behind the nascent Science of Security is to understand how computing systems are architected, built, used, and maintained with a view to understanding and addressing security challenges systematically across their life cycle. In particular, two features distinguish the Science of Security from previous research programs on security.
- Scope. The Science of Security considers not just computational artifacts but incorporates the human, social, and organizational aspects of computing within its purview.
- Approach. The Science of Security takes a decidedly scientific approached, based on the understanding of empirical evaluation and theoretical foundations as developed in the natural and social sciences, but adapted as appropriate for the artifiial science (in Herb Simon's term) that is computing.
Following a successful invitational SoS Community Meeting in December 2012, HotSoS 2014 was the first open research event in this continuing series of such events.
Symposium proceedings will be indexed in the IEEE digital library.
Topics
Submissions are welcomed on all topics relevant to the theme of Science of Security including, but not limited to, the following (each from the perspective of the Science of Security):
- Computing architectures
- Networks
- Software engineering practices
- Models of human interaction and behavior
- Organizational models
- Evaluation methodologies
If you have any questions about the topics of submission instructions, please feel free to contact the Program Chairs, Professors David M. Nicol and Munindar P. Singh, at hotsos14@gmail.com
Emphasis on Science: Required Section in Each Submission
The key motivation behind Hot SoS is to bring out and promote the science underlying security. Therefore, we require that each submission include a section called "The Science" in which the authors should describe in what ways their contribution constitutes science. We interpret science in the broadest sense of the systematization of knowledge to uncover foundational principles through theory-driven inquiry. Thus methods reminiscent of the natural, life, social, or behavioral sciences are all acceptable. Our motivation behind asking for this section is not to impose any ideology on researchers but to give a spotlight to and thus promote the science of security.
Important Dates
Abstracts: November 8, 2013 December 4, 2013 January 3, 2014
	Submissions: November 15, 2013 December 11, 2013 January 6, 2014
	First round of reviews: January 10, 2014 February 17, 2014
	Author responses: January 15, 2014 February 20, 2014
	Decisions: February 1, 2014 February 28, 2014
	Final versions of accepted submissions: March 1, 2014 March 21, 2014
	Symposium and Bootcamp: April 8-9, 2014
Submission Instructions
Submissions must be formatted in the IEEE Conference Style and be no more than 10 pages not including bibliography and appendices, and no more than 12 pages total. We recommend the IEEE LaTeX package, IEEETran, to be used with the following options: \documentclass[10pt, conference]{IEEEtran}
Submissions must be prepared for double-blind review, that is, omit the authors names as well as any explicit indicators of the authors' identities such as referring to a past publication as "our work" or "we showed".
Submit your manuscript using Easy Chair from here.
Submissions must not be previously published or accepted for publication and must not be submitted for publication elsewhere between the Hot SoS submission and decision dates. Prior or concurrent submission to workshops without a proceedings might be acceptable, if disclosed at the time of submission.
Organization
Organizing Committee
General Chair: Laurie A. Williams, North Carolina State University
	Program Co-Chair: David M. Nicol, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
	Program Co-Chair: Munindar P. Singh, North Carolina State University
	Web Chair: William Enck, North Carolina State University
	Publicity Chair: Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University
	Finance Chair: Lucas Layman, Fraunhofer Institute
	NSA Liason: Heather Lucas, Department of Defense
Technical Program Committee
Gul Agha, University of Illinois
	Ehab Al-Shaer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
	Bo An, Nanyang Technological University
	Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University
	Jean Camp, Indiana University
	Amit Chopra, Lancaster University
	Jedidiah Crandall, University of New Mexico
	Fabiano Dalpiaz, Utrecht University
	Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon University
	Scott DeLoach, Kansas State University
	Will Enck, North Carolina State University
	Rino Falcone, ISTC-CNR
	David Garlan, Carnegie Mellon University
	Dieter Gollmann, TU Hamburg-Harburg
	Mark Greaves, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
	Xiaohui Gu, North Carolina State University
	Somesh Jha, University of Wisconsin
	Christopher Kiekintveld, University of Texas at El Paso
	Karl Levitt, UC Davis
	Ninghui Li, Purdue University
	Emil Lupu, Imperial College
	William Martin, U.S. Department of Defense
	Christopher Mayhorn, North Carolina State University
	Ian Molloy, IBM Research
	Emerson Murphy-Hill, North Carolina State University
	Tim Norman, University of Aberdeen
	Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen
	Simon Parsons, University of Liverpool
	Wolter Pieters, Delft University of Technology
	Robert Proctor, Purdue University
	Angela Sasse, University College London
	Greg Shannon, CERT
	Kevin Sullivan, University of Virginia
	Wamberto Vasconcelos, University of Aberdeen
	Serena Villata, INRIA Sophia Antipolis
	Claire Vishik, Intel
	Tara Whalen, Carleton University
	Rebecca Wright, Rutgers University
Sponsors
- National Security Agency
- Army Research Office
- IEEE (Pending)
Hot SoS 2015
The Next Hot SoS will be April 21-22, 2015 at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.