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    IEEE ISSRE 2026 - 37th IEEE International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering (ISSRE 2026): Call for Contributions

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    Website https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/ | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category Software Engineering; Software Reliability

    Deadline: April 10, 2026 | Date: October 20, 2026-October 23, 2026

    Venue/Country: 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina Limassol, Cyprus

    Updated: 2026-01-31 23:10:36 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    *** Call for Contributions ***

    37th IEEE International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering

    (ISSRE 2026)

    October 20-23, 2026, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina

    Limassol, Cyprus

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/

    The International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering (ISSRE) is the leading

    conference on software reliability research and practice. ISSRE focuses on techniques and

    tools for assessing, predicting, and improving the reliability, safety, security, and resilience

    of software systems. As modern software increasingly integrates AI/ML components,

    operates autonomously, and spans cloud-to-edge environments, ensuring reliable system

    behavior is more critical than ever.

    Topics of Interest

    ISSRE 2026 invites high-quality contributions that advance the theory and practice of

    software reliability across contemporary software-intensive systems, including systems

    that incorporate AI/ML components. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

    Foundations of Reliability and Dependability

    • Principles, models, metrics, empirical methods, and theories of software reliability,

    resilience, robustness, and safety

    • Systematic approaches to fault prevention, fault removal, fault tolerance, and fault

    forecasting in modern software systems

    • Testing and debugging, formal methods, model checking, static/dynamic analysis,

    verification, and runtime assurance

    Reliability in AI-Driven and Autonomic Systems

    • Reliability engineering for AI-enabled, autonomous, self-adaptive, and cyber-physical

    systems

    • Assurance, testing, verification, and certification of AI/ML components, including

    foundation and generative models

    • Reliability of AI-generated code: validation, verification, explainability, defect analysis,

    and trustworthy automation of development tasks

    • Impact of AI on software lifecycle processes (design, testing, evolution, operations, and

    quality management)

    AI Techniques for Reliability Engineering

    • Machine learning for defect prediction, anomaly detection, debugging assistance, fault

    localization, and test automation

    • Learning-based approaches to self-healing, resilience management, predictive

    maintenance, and reliability optimization

    • Reliability governance in AI-driven DevOps pipelines, including transparency,

    interpretability, and auditability

    Software Reliability in Emerging System Domains

    • Reliability assurance for cloud, edge, IoT, 5G/6G, cyber-physical, high-performance,

    and network softwarization environments

    • Dependability of open-source ecosystems, data-driven pipelines, model hubs, and

    AI-assisted contributions

    • Benchmarking, stress testing, workload modeling, and measurement frameworks for

    large-scale and AI-based systems

    Trustworthiness, Security, and Responsible Software Engineering

    • Intersections of reliability with security, privacy, fairness, transparency, and regulatory

    compliance

    • Societal, ethical, and human impacts of pervasive AI-enabled software systems

    • Responsible governance of AI-based systems, including lifecycle assurance, auditability,

    and risk analysis

    Human-Centered, Empirical, and Reproducible Reliability Research

    • Field studies, experience reports, user studies, and human factors in reliability

    engineering

    • Public datasets, benchmark suites, reproducibility packages, and replication/negative-

    result studies

    • Tooling, automation, continuous reliability monitoring, observability, and operational

    feedback loops

    Research Track Paper Categories

    The research track at ISSRE 2026 invites high-quality submissions of technical research

    papers that describe original, unpublished results exploring new scientific ideas,

    contribute new evidence to established research directions, or reflect on practical

    experience. Specifically, ISSRE solicits submissions in three categories:

    • Research (RES) papers

    • Practical experience reports (PER)

    • Tools and artefacts (TAR) papers

    Papers will be assessed with criteria appropriate to each category. All the papers of the

    three categories are regular and full papers, and will be published in the same ISSRE

    proceedings.

    RES Papers

    RES papers (12 pages, including references) should describe a novel contribution to the

    reliability of software systems. Novelty should be argued via concrete evidence and

    appropriate positioning within the state of the art. RES papers are also expected to

    explain the validation process and its limitations clearly.

    PER Papers

    PER papers (12 pages, including references) should provide an in-depth exposition of

    practical experiences ideally performed by a collaboration of researchers and industry

    practitioners. The key contribution of these papers should be lessons learned from

    applying established research tools and methods to ISSRE topics, or new knowledge

    acquired through empirical studies conducted using various research methodologies.

    Negative results are welcome, e.g., discussing where or why current research cannot be

    applied in an industrially relevant context.

    TAR Papers

    TAR papers (6 – 10 pages, including references) should describe a new tool or artefact.

    Tool-focused TAR papers must present either a new tool or a novel and substantial

    extension of an existing tool. They should include a description of (i) the theoretical

    foundations, (ii) the design and implementation aspects, and (iii) experiments with

    realistic case studies. Making the tool publicly available is strongly encouraged.

    Artefact-focused TAR papers should cover (i) a working copy of the software and (ii)

    experimental data sets. Dataset papers should introduce a new dataset that supports

    experimentation, benchmarking, evaluation, or training in AI-driven software engineering.

    Submissions should describe: (i) dataset motivation and scope, (ii) data collection and

    processing methodology, (iii) dataset structure and statistics, and (iv) potential use cases.

    Benchmark papers should present a new benchmark suite for evaluating tools, LLMs, or

    algorithms. Submissions should include: (i) benchmark design principles, (ii) task

    definitions and evaluation metrics, (iii) baseline results, and (iv) reproducibility package.

    The ISSRE conference encourages authors of all three categories of research track papers

    to follow the principles of transparency, reproducibility, and replicability. Authors are

    encouraged to disclose data to increase reproducibility and replicability. Should the paper

    be accepted, the authors will have the opportunity (and are encouraged to) submit

    artifacts to the Artifact Evaluation (AE) track, to enhance the reproducibility and quality of

    the research. By submitting your artifacts, you not only contribute to the progress of our

    field but also stand a chance to earn badges that will be displayed on your papers in the

    conference proceedings, showcasing the credibility and rigor of your work.

    Industry Track Paper Categories

    The ISSRE Industry Track gathers industry representatives as well as researchers from,

    within or in collaboration with industry to discuss software reliability, quality assurance as

    well as experiences and lessons learned. This year we will bring experiences from self-

    made tools, usage of AI, generative AI and machine learning in relation to software

    reliability.

    Industry track papers are expected to be of interest to software development

    professionals, as well as to anyone researching or working in the area of software

    reliability, software quality, and process improvement groups, with concrete relevance to

    industrial problems and practical applications.

    We invite three kinds of submissions to the Industry Track:

    • Enlightening Talk or Tool Demo: 1-2 page abstract (OR a Power Point presentation OR a

    video for a tool demo).

    • Short paper: 4-pages (including references).

    • Full paper: 6-pages (including references).

    All the submissions will be reviewed by members of the Industry Track Program

    Committee. Accepted papers (with an abstract) will be included in the ISSRE Supplemental

    Proceedings and submitted for publication to IEEE Xplore.

    Fast Abstracts and Project Highlights Track

    A Fast Abstract (FA) or Project Highlights (PH) paper is a two-page, lightly reviewed

    technical article. The FA/PH track at ISSRE 2026 aims to bring together researchers and

    practitioners working in Software Reliability Engineering (SRE) to:

    • Introduce early original ideas.

    • Discuss relevant work-in-progress and ongoing experiences.

    • Challenge the SRE status quo on key topics.

    • Present critical analyses of prior work.

    • Share lessons learned from real-world SRE applications.

    • Propose new problems from industrial or academic experience.

    • Describe approaches to problems of significance that may not yet have complete results.

    In addition to traditional Fast Abstracts, the track welcomes Project Highlights (PH) papers.

    PH papers are expected to disseminate results, visions, methodologies, tools, and ongoing

    activities from national and international research projects (e.g., European, or multi-

    institutional initiatives).

    Project Highlights may include, but are not limited to:

    • Overviews of funded research projects and their objectives.

    • Project methodologies, architectures, and experimental frameworks.

    • Early or intermediate results, including lessons learned and preliminary insights.

    • Datasets, benchmarks, tools, platforms, and other project outcomes released or in

    progress.

    • Collaboration experiences, challenges, and emerging research directions from national

    or international projects.

    Project Highlights that can stimulate discussion and collaboration within the ISSRE

    community are welcome. Ongoing projects and projects completed not earlier than

    October 2025 are eligible.

    Replications and Negative Results Track

    The Replications and Negative Results (RENE) Track has been introduced in the software

    engineering community for a while and received overwhelmingly positive feedback. This

    year, we establish this track at ISSRE and invite researchers to (1) replicate results from

    previous papers and (2) publish studies with important and relevant negative or null

    results (results that fail to show an effect, yet demonstrate the research paths that did not

    pay off).

    We also encourage the publication of the negative results or replicable aspects of

    previously published work. For example, authors of a published paper reporting a working

    solution for a given problem can document in a “negative results paper” other (failed)

    attempts they made before defining the working solution they published.

    • Replication studies. The papers in this category must go beyond simply re-implementing

    an algorithm and/or re-running the artifacts provided by the original paper. Such

    submissions should at least apply the approach to new data sets (open-source or

    proprietary). A replication study should clearly report on results that the authors were able

    to replicate, as well as on the aspects of the work that were not replicable.

    • Negative results papers. We seek papers that report on negative results. We seek

    negative results for all types of program comprehension research in any empirical area

    (qualitative, quantitative, case study, experiment, etc.). For example, did your controlled

    experiment not show an improvement over the baseline? Even if negative, results obtained

    are still valuable when they are either not obvious or disprove widely accepted wisdom.

    Best Paper Awards

    Research Track

    ISSRE is pleased to announce the IEEE Best Research Paper Award, awarded every year to

    the best paper in the Research Track.

    Industry Track

    The Industry Program Chair will select three candidates among top-ranked papers

    presenting and motivating novel and disruptive ideas that address problems relevant for

    industry. Selection will be based on the reviewers’ feedback, novelty and potential impact

    of the results. The final selection of the best paper will be done by the audience attending

    the presentation of the candidate papers. Eligible papers must be (1) full papers accepted

    to the industry track, and (2) co-authored by at least one author whose primary affiliation

    is in Industry.

    Special Journal Issue

    Authors of accepted papers will be invited to submit an extended version of their work to

    a special issue of the Empirical Software Engineering (EMSE) journal (under negotiation as

    in previous editions of the conference). The Call for Papers will be available soon.

    Workshop Proposals

    ISSRE strives to be the conference that appeals to both researchers and practitioners. To

    that end, we invite proposals for workshops to co-locate with the Symposium and provide

    additional opportunities for collaborating and exchanging information. The workshops

    aim at discussing research developments and challenges at an early stage. ISSRE welcomes

    workshops that explore new ways to provide and assess software reliability, safety, and

    security. We also seek workshops that deal with the provision of reliable, safe, and secure

    software and systems in fast-growing, transformative application domains. Appropriately

    defined workshop proposals have the following characteristics:

    • They offer researchers a forum to exchange and discuss scientific and engineering ideas

    at an early stage before maturation that would warrant conference or journal publication.

    • They attract practitioners and researchers to working sessions to discuss and make

    progress toward solutions to current and future problems in engineering high assurance

    software and systems.

    • They focus on collaborative discussions and information sharing between researchers

    and industry practitioners.

    Workshops affiliated with ISSRE in previous years with good organization and numbers of

    participants are pre-approved. Their organizers do not need to submit a new workshop

    proposal. Their organizers are kindly asked to inform the workshop chairs about returning

    the workshop to ISSRE in 2026.

    Submission Guidelines and Instructions

    Research Track

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/cfp-research/

    Industry Track

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/industry-track/

    Fast Abstracts and Project Highlights Track

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/fast-abstract-track/

    Replications and Negative Results Track

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/cfp-rene-track/

    Workshop Proposals

    https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/call-for-workshop-proposals/

    Conference Proceedings

    The conference proceedings will be published by IEEE Computer Society Conference

    Publishing Services (CPS). Papers presented at the conference will be submitted for

    inclusion into IEEE Xplore and to all of the A&I (abstracting and indexing) partners (such as

    the EI Compendex).

    Important Dates (AoE)

    Research Track

    • Abstract Submission Deadline: April 10, 2026

    • Paper Submission Deadline: April 17, 2026

    • Author Rebuttal Period: June 5 – June 8, 2026

    • Decisions and Early Notification: June 15, 2026

    • Author Revision Period: June 16 – July 3, 2026

    • Notification to Authors: July 8, 2026

    • Camera Ready Papers: August 19, 2026

    Industry Track

    • Abstract Submission Deadline: June 28, 2026 & July 3, 2026

    • Paper Submission Deadline: July 5, 2026 & July 12, 2026

    • Notification to Authors: August 12, 2026

    • Camera Ready Papers: August 19, 2026

    • Enlightening Talks or Tool Demos (without abstract; not to appear in the proceedings): August 15, 2026

    Fast Abstracts and Projects Highlights Track

    • Submission deadline: June 15, 2026

    • Notification to authors: August 5, 2026

    • Camera ready papers: August 19, 2026

    Replications and Negative Results Track

    • Submission deadline: July 5, 2026

    • Notification to authors: August 12, 2026

    • Camera ready papers: August 19, 2026

    Workshop Proposals

    • Workshop proposal deadline: May 14, 2026

    • Workshop proposal notification: May 21, 2026

    • Workshop paper submission deadline: July 20, 2026

    (NOTE: This date is only indicative – please refer to individual workshop webpages for

    information about deadlines)

    • Workshop paper notification to authors: August 10, 2026

    • Camera ready papers: August 17, 2026

    All tracks

    • Author Registration Deadline: August 19, 2026

    Organisation

    General Chairs

    • Leonardo Mariani, University of Milano - Bicocca, Italy

    • George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus

    Program Coordinator

    • Roberto Natella, GSSI, Italy

    Research Program Committee Chairs

    • Domenico Cotroneo, UNC Charlotte, USA

    • Jie M. Zhang, King's College London, UK

    Industry Program Chairs

    • Jinyang Liu, Bytedance, USA

    • Sigrid Eldh, Ericsson AB, Sweden

    Workshop Chairs

    • Georgia Kapitsaki, University of Cyprus, Cyprus

    • August Shi, The University of Texas at Austin, USA

    Doctoral Symposium Chairs

    • Stefan Winter, LMU Munich, Germany

    • Lili Wei, McGill University, Canada

    Fast Abstract Chairs

    • Luigi Lavazza, University of Insubria, Italy

    • Yintong Huo, SMU, Singapore

    JIC2 Chair

    • Helene Waeselynck, LAAS-CNRS, France

    Publicity Chairs

    • Allison K. Sulivan, The University of Texas at Arlington, USA

    • Jose D'Abruzzo Pereira, University of Coimbra, Portugal

    Publication Chairs

    • Sherlock Licorish, Otago Business School, New Zealand

    • Maria Teresa Rossi, GSSI, Italy

    Artifact Evaluation Chairs

    • Naghmeh Ivaki, University of Coimbra, Portugal

    • Fumio Machida, University of Tsukuba, Japan

    Diversity and Inclusion Chair

    • Eleni Constantinou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus

    Financial Chair

    • Costas Pattichis, University of Cyprus, Cyprus

    Web Chairs

    • Michalis Ioannides, Easy Conferences LTD

    • Elena Masserini, University of Milano - Bicocca, Italy

    Registration Chair

    • Easy Conferences LTD


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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