Welcome to the 2022 World Congress in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and Applied Computing website. We anticipate having between 1,000 and 2,000 participants in the Congress. The congress includes
21 major tracks composed of: 122 technical, research, and panel sessions as well as a number of keynote lectures and tutorials; all will be held simultaneously, same location and dates: July 25-28, 2022. This year’s Congress will be a hybrid event that combines a “live” in-person event with a “virtual” online component. We anticipate that most speakers will physically be attending (ie, most talks are expected to be face-to-face).
The Congress is among the top five largest annual gathering of researchers in computer science, computer engineering, data science, artificial intelligence, STEM, and applied computing. We anticipate to have attendees from about 75 countries and territories.
Last year, the Congress had attracted speakers/authors and participants affiliated with over 158 different universities (including many from the top 50 ranked institutions), major IT corporations (including: Microsoft, Google, Apple, SAP, Facebook, Oracle, Amazon, Yahoo, Samsung, IBM, Ebay, GE, Siemens, Philips, Ericsson, BAE Systems, Hitachi, NTT, Twitter, Uber Technologies, ...), major corporations (including: Exxon Mobil, Johnson & Johnson, JPMorgan Chase, PetroChina, GlaxoSmithKline, HSBC, Airbus, Boeing, Hyundai, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, ...), government research agencies (NSF, NIH, DoE, US Air Force, NSA National Security Agency, Central Intelligence Agency, ...), US national laboratories (including, NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration, ANL Argonne National Lab, Sandia National Lab, ORNL Oak Ridge National Lab, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Los Alamos National Lab, Pacific Northwest National Lab, ...), and a number of Venture Capitalists as well as distinguished speakers discussing Intellectual Property issues. Last year, 54% of attendees were from academia, 25% from industry; 20% from government and funding agencies; and 1% unknown. About half of the attendees were from outside USA; from 69 nations.
An important mission of the Congress is to Provide a unique platform for a diverse community of constituents composed of scholars, researchers, developers, educators, and practitioners. The Congress makes concerted effort to reach out to participants affiliated with diverse entities (such as: universities, institutions, corporations, government agencies, and research centers/labs) from all over the world. The congress also attempts to connect participants from institutions that have teaching as their main mission with those who are affiliated with institutions that have research as their main mission. The congress uses a quota system to achieve its institution and geography diversity objectives.
To get a feeling about the conferences' atmosphere, see:
Photo GalleryYou are invited to submit a paper for consideration. ALL ACCEPTED PAPERS will be published in the corresponding proceedings by Publisher:
Springer Nature - Book Series: Transactions on Computational Science & Computational Intelligence
https://www.springer.com/series/11769Prospective authors are invited to submit their papers by uploading them to the evaluation web site at:
https://american-cse.org/drafts/See the web link below for a small subset of publications based on papers accepted in the CSCE proceedings: many of these books and journal special issues have already received the top 25% downloads in their respective fields and/or identified as "Highly Accessed" by publishers and/or science citation index trackers.
Special IssuesRefer to the link below for some information on citation record:
Publication Prof. David Patterson
Fellow: IEEE, ACM, AAAS & Member, National Academy of Engineering; Shared with John Hennessy, the IEEE John von Neumann Medal; University of California, Berkeley
(Pioneering contributions to RISC processor design)
Prof. Ian Foster
Fellow: ACM, AAAS, BCS; Distinguished Fellow, Argonne National Lab.; Distinguished Professor, University of Chicago
(Introduced Grid Computing)
The Late Prof. Lotfi A. Zadeh
Fellow: IEEE, AAAS, ACM, AAAI, IFSA; Member: National Academy of Engineering University of California, Berkeley
(Father of Fuzzy Logic)
Prof. H. J. Siegel
Fellow: IEEE & ACM; Distinguished Professor Colorado State University (formerly at Purdue)
(Pioneering contributions to Heterogeneous Computing)
The Late Prof. John Holland
University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan
(Father of Genetic Algorithms)
Prof. Ruzena Bajcsy
Member: National Academy of Eng., National Academy of Science; Fellow: IEEE, ACM, AAAI; Director, CITRIS University of California, Berkeley
(Pioneering contributions to AI, HCI & vision)
Prof. Firouz Naderi
Former Director, Solar System Exploration, NASA's JPL; Former NASA's Program Manager for Mars Explortion
(Contributed to some of America's most iconic robotic space missions)
Prof. John R. Koza
Former Consulting Prof., Stanford University
(Father of Genetic Programming)
Prof. David Lorge Parnas
Fellow: IEEE, ACM, RSC, CAE, GI; MRIA McMaster University, Canada
(Pioneer of Software Engineering)
Prof. John Gustafson
Recipient of Inaugural Gordon Bell Prize; CTO, Ceranovo, Inc.
(Inventor of Gustafson's Law)
Anousheh Ansari
Chairwoman, Prodea Systems; Space Ambassador;
(First Female Space Tourist)