Call For Papers

As high-performance computing systems move beyond the exascale era, the community continues to address increasingly complex challenges associated with extreme-scale computing. These challenges include dynamic load balancing, efficient data movement, resilience, energy efficiency, heterogeneous resource management, and maximizing utilization across diverse architectures incorporating CPUs, GPUs, and specialized accelerators. Task-based programming models and runtime systems have demonstrated their ability to address many of these challenges through advanced mechanisms such as asynchronous execution, oversubscription, task and data locality, shared-memory optimizations, and data-dependence-driven scheduling.

This workshop explores the role of task-based programming models and runtime systems in current and future HPC environments. It brings together researchers, developers, users, and practitioners to share experiences, discuss advances in programming models, runtimes, and applications, and evaluate how these technologies address the challenges posed by modern and emerging computing architectures. The workshop provides a forum to exchange ideas, identify opportunities for improved performance, scalability, portability, resilience, and productivity, and foster collaborations that advance the efficient utilization of next-generation HPC systems.

Contact: If you have any problems or questions, please contact us via e-mail at: diehlpk@lanl.gov

Authors need to submit their work through EasyChair. Submissions must be in Springer LNCS format.

Abstracts:

Authors are invited to submit abstracts and indicate if they will submit a short or full paper. This is a two step process and authors will first submit the abstract (October 9th, 2026) and later submit the short or full paper (January 19th, 2027).

Full Papers:

Authors are invited to submit original papers of between ten and twelve pages, including text, the references section, appendices, and figures.

Short Papers:

Alternatively, authors submit position papers and work-in-progress as short papers of at most 6 pages in length, which include tables, figures, references, and appendices.

At least three program committee members will review each submission. Reviews will be double-blind, and papers will be assessed for quality, relevance, and presentation of contributions. Springer LNCS will publish the accepted papers.

Best Paper/Poster Award:

The Best Paper Award will be selected on the basis of explicit recommendations of the reviewers and their scoring towards the paper’s originality and quality.

Important Dates:

Abstract Submission Deadline: October 9, 2026

Paper Submission Deadline: January 15, 2026

Notification of Acceptance: February 5, 2027

Camera-ready paper: February 19, 2027