We are happy to announce that the OC-DDC will feature a Keynote by Prof. Dr.-Ing. Astrid Nieße (Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg) with the topic Towards controlled self-organisation in the field – challenges in the energy domain.


The Ninth International “Organic Computing Doctoral Dissertation Colloquium” (OC-DDC) will take place online from Thursday, June 10th to Friday, June 11th and is co-organised by Prof. Astrid Nieße from the Offis / University of Oldenburg. The OC-DDC is organised by the Special Interest Group on Organic Computing within the Gesellschaft für Informatik.

We invite applications from PhD students at any stage of their doctoral studies on Organic Computing, Autonomic Computing, intelligent systems, self-adaptation and self-organisation, self-aware computing systems, autonomous learning, self-* mechanisms, trustworthy systems, and related research topics.

Colloquium Theme

The intent of the DDC is to bring together PhD students who have their research focus within the broader Organic Computing community and will not have defended their thesis before June 2021. The main goal of this colloquium is to foster excellence in OC-related research by providing students with feedback and advice that are particularly relevant to their doctoral studies and career development. Each participant will take part in the colloquium organisation and the review process for the other participants. Keynote speakers will present current research in the field. They will be available during the OC-DDC and participate in the feedback process for the PhD students.

The schedule includes:

  • Prepare an extended abstract or short paper of 6 pages (max.) reflecting your PhD
    concept
  • Participate in the review process
  • Participate in the (supervised) decision process (acceptance of submissions)
  • Present your work to an audience consisting mainly of other PhD students from your
    community
  • Identify points of contact between your work and others
  • Build your social research network
  • Meet experts in your research domain and listen to their invited talks and expertise
  • Enjoy the opportunity to improve your PhD work, overcome stipulations and learn from the experts

Submission

PhD students are invited to participate by submitting an extended abstract of up to 6 pages (written in English, in Springer’s LNCS style). The colloquium will give participants the opportunity to present their ongoing research in a friendly forum. They will obtain valuable feedback from colloquium attendees in a constructively critical and informal atmosphere.

After the OC-DDC, each participant will be invited to prepare a book chapter for an edited book. The book chapter will contain approx. 14 pages. For instance, the book of the DDC’s 2014 edition is available at: http://www.upress.uni-kassel.de/katalog/abstract.php?978-3-86219-832-0