Accepted Papers and Best Papers

Thanks to our sponsors, Google, the GEMOC initiative and Itemis we could offer the following great papers a prize:

The winner of the 2014 best paper award is:

  • A SAT-based Debugging Tool for State Machines and Sequence Diagrams, Petra Kaufmann, Martin Kronegger, Andreas Pfandler, Martina Seidl and Magdalena Widl

The winner of the 2014 best student paper award is:

  • The Moldable Debugger: a Framework for Developing Domain-Specific Debuggers, Andrei Chis, Tudor Girba and Oscar Nierstrasz (best student paper)

The winner of the 2014 best reviewer award is:

  • Emilie Balland

Please find the full proceedings here, offering the following accepted papers:

  • A SAT-based Debugging Tool for State Machines and Sequence Diagrams, Petra Kaufmann, Martin Kronegger, Andreas Pfandler, Martina Seidl and Magdalena Widl

  • The Moldable Debugger: a Framework for Developing Domain-Specific Debuggers, Andrei Chis, Tudor Girba and Oscar Nierstrasz (best student paper)

  • Streamlining Control Flow Graph Construction with DCFlow, Mark Hills

  • Bounded Islands, Jan Kurs, Mircea Lungu and Oscar Nierstrasz

  • Origin Tracking in Attribute Grammars, Kevin Williams and Eric Van Wyk

  • Dynamic Scope Discovery for Model Transformations, Maris Jukss, Clark Verbrugge, Daniel Varro and Hans Vangheluwe

  • Model Checking of CTL-Extended OCL Specifications, Sebastian Gabmeyer, Robert Bill, Martina Seidl and Petra Kaufmann

  • Simple, efficient, sound-and-complete combinator parsing for all context-free grammars, using an oracle, Tom Ridge

  • Towards User-Friendly Projectional Editors, Markus Voelter, Janet Siegmund, Thorsten Berger and Bernd Kolb

  • Eco: a Language Composition Editor, Lukas Diekmann and Laurence Tratt

  • Unifying and Generalizing Relations in Role-Based Data Modeling and Navigation, Daco Harkes and Eelco Visser

  • ProMoBox: A Framework for Generating Domain-Specific Property Languages, Bart Meyers, Romuald Deshayes, Levi Lucio, Eugene Syriani, Manuel Wimmer and Hans Vangheluwe

  • A Metamodel Family for Role-based Modeling and Programming Languages, Thomas Kühn, Max Leuthäuser, Sebastian Götz, Uwe Aßmann and Christoph Seidl

  • fUML as an Assembly Language for Model Transformation, Massimo Tisi, Frédéric Jouault, Jérôme Delatour, Zied Saidi and Hassene Choura

  • Evaluating the usability of a visual notation when developing new feature models, Aleksandar Jaksic, Robert France, Philippe Collet and Sudipto Ghosh

  • Respect Your Parents: How Attribution and Rewriting Can Get Along, Tony Sloane, Matthew Roberts and Leonard Hamey

  • Monto: A Disintegrated Development Environment, Tony Sloane, Matthew Roberts, Scott Buckley and Shaun Muscat

  • AIOCJ: A Choreographic Framework for Safe Adaptive Distributed Applications, Mila Dalla Preda, Maurizio Gabbrielli, Saverio Giallorenzo, Ivan Lanese and Jacopo Maurio

  • Test-data generation for Xtext with Xtextgen, Johannes Härtel, Lukas Härtel and Ralf Laemmel