The last years have witnessed a permanent change of vision of cloud systems, evolving from a centralized system to a highly distributed environment. Nowadays, the most important stakeholders such as private companies, public agencies, research communities and citizens rely on the cloud for a number of purposes, ranging from sharing hardware infrastructures to software, data, and sensing services.
The services designed for complex scenarios such as smart cities, Agriculture 4.0 and the upcoming Industry 5.0, pave the path for a new era of highly distributed and cognitive clouds. For instance, the complexity of human dynamics in a city can be better analysed by decentralising the infrastructure, analysing how the distributed infrastructure has to be evolved at runtime, integrating and opening the data and sharing the services. The distributed and cognitive cloud paradigm is a key enabling technology, whereby applications and network functions are hosted in the cloud-to-thing continuum, and their placement can evolve depending on the context. Despite such a rapid (re-)evolution of edge-cloud systems, the extremely heterogeneous smart city applications (sensing as a service, crowd sensing, etc.) makes the satisfaction of all the requirements a big challenge. In this context, emergent paradigms like artificial intelligence (AI), privacy-enhancing technologies (PET), cybersecurity, blockchain (BC), and metaverse are key enablers for cloud-to-thing systems to shape the development of autonomic orchestration and networking.
The focus of MoCS 2025 is in the convergence of distributed clouds, cognitive clouds, digital twins and privacy-aware applications for complex scenarios like smart cities and learning-driven approaches for urban planning. The workshop aims at disseminating results on both theoretical and applicative aspects.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following
Application of distributed clouds to smart cities services.
Models for context-aware crowdsensing techniques at urban-level scale.
Human-enabled Edge Computing (HEC) paradigm.
Computing continuum for smart cities services.
Cognitives cloud for smart cities services.
Digital twins for smart cities services.
Edge data center deployment in urban environments.
ML- and AI-based approaches cloud/edge-based smart city applications.
AI-driven models, architectures, and frameworks for edge computing.
Experiences on the (re)use of open platforms for cloudintegrated smart cities services.
Design and evaluation tools for scalability and efficient resource allocation in smart cities.
Design and application of cloud/edge technologies to Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS).
ML-evaluation for automatic road anomaly detection.
Vehicular cloud architectures for provisioning of smart cities services.
Models and paradigms for the management of cloud/MEC services within/between data.
Data-driven approaches for smart transportation in urban areas.
Blockchain solutions for secure and reliable transactions between counterparts in data sharing/trading.
Security and privacy techniques to cloud/edge-based smart city applications.
Post-quantum security and privacy for smart city applications.
Design and evaluation of microservices-based networking for 5G edge networks.
Edge AI for next generation O-RAN architecture.
Important Dates
Submission: 10th January, 2025 Extended to 09th March, 2025 (FIRM)
Notification: 26th March, 2025
Camera-ready: 30th March, 2025
Workshop Date: 2nd July, 2025
Each deadline expires at 23:59:59 EEST
Papers must be submitted electronically through the workshop's management system, at: https://edas.info/newPaper.php?c=33137
Authors are invited to submit original technical papers for publication in MoCS 2025. Manuscripts should be written in English and should not exceed 6 pages in the IEEE double-column proceedings format including tables, figures, references and appendices.
Authors can find the IEEE double-column conference proceedings template at the following link:
https://www.ieee.org/conferences_events/conferences/publishing/templates.html
At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register to the conference and present the paper. Only registered and presented papers will be included in the ISCC 2023 Proceedings.
Accepted papers will be included in the ISCC 2025 Proceedings and will be submitted for inclusion to IEEEXplore. The IEEE ISCC Proceedings have been indexed in the past by ISI, dblp and Scopus. This makes the IEEE ISCC Workshops publication venues with very high visibility and impact in both Computer and Communications areas.