Calendario de matrícula de los programas de doctorado de la Universidad de Sevilla para el curso académico 2014-2015.
Se detallan los procedimientos a seguir para el seguimiento de la normativa, requisitos, y temporización de los estudios de doctorado regulados por el RD 99/2011.
Primer plazo de admisión al Programa de Doctorado: del 15 al 30 de Septiembre de 2014.
- Tramitación de solicitudes de admisión a través de la plataforma; http://admisiondoctorado.us.es/
- Guía de uso de la plataforma para los doctorandos
Conferencia Inaugural 2014-2015: El miércoles 5 de Noviembre de 2014, con motivo de la inauguración del curso académico 2014-2015 del Programa de Doctorado de Ingeniería Informática, el Dr. Mario de Jesús Pérez Jiménez, Catedrático de Universidad del área de Ciencias de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial, imparte la charla titulada: “Computación Inspirada en la Naturaleza: Perspectivas, Aplicaciones y Retos“.
Conferencia Antonio Vallecillo (UMA): El lunes 10 de noviembre de 2014, el profesor Antonio Vallecillo imparte una conferencia invitada titulada: “El Doctorado en Informática: ¿Nuevo vino en viejas botellas?“. RESUMEN: El nuevo Real Decreto 99/2011 ha supuesto un cambio sustancial en el tercer ciclo de los estudios universitarios y en las prácticas que conducen al desarrollo de la tesis. Estos cambios son especialmente significativos en los doctorados de ciencias e ingenierías, y en particular en Informática, con la aparición de nuevas formas de comunicación social y de evaluación de la actividad investigadora, las bases de datos de publicaciones y los índices de impacto, la reputación online de los investigadores, y la profesionalización de los doctorados. Esta charla está dedicada a presentar, y debatir, lo que representan estas novedades para los estudiantes de doctorado en Informática, y sugerir algunos aspectos que es importante tener en cuenta a la hora de plantear el desarrollo de la tesis y construir nuestra carrera profesional. El profesor Antonio Vallecillo es Catedrático del área de Lenguajes y Sistemas Informático en la Universidad de Málaga, y pertenece al Grupo de Investigación de Ingeniería del Software de la citada Universidad.
Conferencia Cesare Pautasso (Universidad de Lugano): El viernes, 21 de Noviembre de 2014, el profesor Cesare Pautasso, de la Universidad de Lugano (Italia), imparte una charla invitada titulada: “Informatics Research Perspectives: Industry vs. Academia”. Research in Informatics and Computer Science is carried out in Universities and also Industry Labs, with different goals, constraints and priorities. Both perspectives have a significant impact on scientific and technological progress, but this impact is measured in a very different way. This talk will illustrate some of the differences between the two research environments with the goal to help young researchers facing the important decision about where to continue with their research career. Cesare Pautasso is associate professor at the Faculty of Informatics at the University of Lugano, Switzerland. Previously he was a researcher at the IBM Zurich Research Lab (2007) and a senior researcher at ETH Zurich (2004-2007). He completed his graduate studies with a Ph.D. from ETH Zurich in 2004. His research group focuses on building experimental systems to explore the intersection of model-driven software composition techniques, business process modelling languages, and autonomic/Cloud computing, Web 2.0 Mashups, and Self-Organizing, Liquid Service Oriented Architectures.
Conferencia Israel Koren (University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA): El lunes 18 de mayo de 2015, el profesor D. Israel Koren imparte una conferencia invitada titulada: “Heterogeneity within a Core for Improved Power Efficiency and Higher Reliability”. Abstract-- An asymmetric multicore processor (AMP) comprises cores with different sizes of microarchitectural resources yielding very different performance and energy characteristics. Since the computational demands of workloads vary from one task to the other, AMPs can often provide a higher power efficiency than symmetric multicores. Furthermore, as the computational demands of a task change during its course of execution, reassigning the task from one core to another, where it can run more efficiently, can further improve the overall power efficiency. However, too frequent reassignments of tasks to cores may result in high overhead. This overhead can be greatly reduced by designing a morphable core that can dynamically adapt its resource sizes, operating frequency and voltage to assume one of four possible core configurations. Such a morphable architecture allows more frequent task to core configuration reassignments for a better match between the current needs of the task and the available resources. Our results indicate that the proposed morphable architecture controlled by a runtime management scheme can improve the throughput/Watt and reduce the vulnerability to soft errors over executing on a standard out-of-order core. Short Bio: Israel Koren is a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and a fellow of the IEEE. He has been a consultant to companies like IBM, Analog Devices, Intel, AMD and National Semiconductors. His research interests include Fault-Tolerant systems; secure cryptographic devices, Computer architecture and computer arithmetic. He publishes extensively and has over 250 publications in refereed journals and conferences. He is the author of the textbook "Computer Arithmetic Algorithms," 2nd Edition, A.K. Peters, Ltd., 2002, and a co-author of the textbook "Fault Tolerant Systems," Morgan-Kaufman, 2007.
Conferencia José Mª Sempere (Universidad Politécnica de Valencia): El martes 19 de mayo de 2015, el profesor D. José Mª Sempere imparte una conferencia invitada titulada: “Procesamiento de biosecuencias mediante métodos de Inferencia Gramatical”.
Conferencia Paolo Meriggi (Instituto San Carlos, Milan): El próximo viernes 29 de mayo de 2015, el profesor D. Meriggi impartirá una conferencia invitada titulada: “Toward a Novel Approach in Pediatric Rehabilitation: the Computer Assisted Rehabilitation (CARE) Lab”.
Abstract: In the recent years there has been a growing interest in using advanced technology solutions in rehabilitation, although the effectiveness of such a widespread use is still under discussion. It seems that this "technology push" to the wide diffusion of different type of systems and devices (from videogame based consoles to sophisticated VR or robotic systems), not always coped with clear and real rehabilitation needs or goals defined by operators.
After few years of experience in the field, thanks to a strong collaboration between clinicians and technologists in our center in Milano, we have clearly perceived the need of building a Lab dedicated to the design, development/integration and assessment of new technological solutions in rehabilitation, with a specific focus on pediatric one. The talk is then about the guidelines and projects that represent the foundations of the CARE Lab, the lab itself and its features, and its perspectives, in the landscape of what could become a novel approach to (pediatric) rehabilitation.
Conferencia profesores Schahram Dustdar y Hong-Linh Thuong (Vienna Instirure of Technology): El martes 9 de junio de 2015, los Profesores Schahram Dustdar y Hong-Linh Thuong imparten una conferencia invitada titulada: “Engineering Elastic Systems”.
Abstract: En esta charla los ponentes comentaran su visión de los retos a la hora de construir sistemas de información elásticos desde el punto de vista de los últimos avances a nivel de investigación. En particular, se comentan las líneas de investigación en desarrollo que se están llevando a cabo por parte del Grupo de Sistemas Distribuidos (DSG) de la Universidad Técnica de Viena (TUW).
Bio: Schahram Dustdar is Full Professor of Computer Science (Informatics) with a focus on Internet Technologiesheading the Distributed Systems Group at the Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna). From 2004-2010 he was Honorary Professor of Information Systems at the Department of Computing Science at the University of Groningen (RuG), The Netherlands. He is a member of the Academia Europaea: The Academy of Europe, Informatics Section (since 2013) and an IEEE Senior Member (2009). He is recipient of the ACM Distinguished Scientist award (2009) and the IBM Faculty Award (2012). He is an Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions on Services Computing, ACM Transactions on the Web, and ACM Transactions on Internet Technology and on the editorial board of IEEE Internet Computing. He is the Editor-in-Chief of Computing (an SCI-ranked journal of Springer). Hong Linh Troung is an assistant professor for Service Engineering Analytics at the Distributed Systems Group, Institute of Information Systems, Vienna University of Technology, where he was a senior research scientist from March 2007 till April 2013. From March 2005 to February 2007, he was a postdoctoral research scientist at Distributed and Parallel Systems Group, University of Innsbruck. From Nov 2000 to February 2005, he was a researcher at Software Science Group, Institute for Scientific Computing, University of Vienna. Before that, he worked as an assistant lecturer and a researcher in Faculty of Computer Science and Engineering, HCMC University of Technology, Vietnam from 1998 to 2000.