If you use Rogues Gallery hardware of software resources for your published work, please don’t forget to acknowledge the use of this resource. We appreciate your support in talks and papers as this helps us keep the testbed up-to-date with new hardware and tools and also acknowleges our support from the National Science Foundation. You can use one of the following examples for acknowledgment text and a citation to our previously published work on the Rogues Gallery. Please note that all US researchers (i.e., those who submit NSF proposals) should acknowledge the use of the NSF resources in their research while the citation is a nice, optional courtesy.
Arm A64FX Acknowledgment
Octavius is funded via a separate NSF program and is part of the “Hive” supercomputer infrastructure. For work specifically using the A64FX system, please use the following acknowledgment:
“This research was supported by the NSF MRI award #1828187: “MRI: Acquisition of an HPC System for Data-Driven Discovery in Computational Astrophysics, Biology, Chemistry, and Materials Science.”
Rogues Gallery – Text Acknowledgment and Citation
“This research was supported in part through research infrastructure and services provided by the Rogues Gallery testbed [1,2] hosted by the Center for Research into Novel Computing Hierarchies (CRNCH) at Georgia Tech. The Rogues Gallery testbed is primarily supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under NSF Award Number #2016701. Any opinions, findings and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect those of the NSF.”
[1] Young, Jeffrey S., Jason Riedy, Thomas M. Conte, Vivek Sarkar, Prasanth Chatarasi, and Sriseshan Srikanth. “Experimental Insights from the Rogues Gallery.” In 2019 IEEE International Conference on Rebooting Computing (ICRC), pp. 1-8. IEEE, 2019.
[2] Powell, Will, Jason Riedy, Jeffrey S. Young, and Thomas M. Conte. “Wrangling Rogues: A Case Study on Managing Experimental Post-Moore Architectures.” In Proceedings of the Practice and Experience in Advanced Research Computing, p. 61. ACM, 2019.
LaTeX Citation
“This research was supported in part through research infrastructure and services provided by the Rogues Gallery testbed~\cite{young:2019:rg-exp-insights} hosted by the Center for Research into Novel Computing Hierarchies (CRNCH) at Georgia Tech. The Rogues Gallery testbed is primarily supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under NSF Award Number \#2016701. Any opinions, findings and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect those of the NSF.”
@inproceedings{young:2019:rg-exp-insights,
author={Young, Jeffrey S. and Riedy, Jason and Conte, Thomas M. and Sarkar, Vivek and Chatarasi, Prasanth and Srikanth, Sriseshan},
booktitle={2019 IEEE International Conference on Rebooting Computing (ICRC)},
title={Experimental Insights from the Rogues Gallery},
year={2019},
pages={1-8},
doi={10.1109/ICRC.2019.8914707},
month={Nov}}
Alternatively you can also cite our earlier PEARC publication on the Rogues Gallery using this BibTeX entry.
@inproceedings{powell:2019:rg-pearc,
author = {Powell, Will and Riedy, Jason and Young, Jeffrey S. and Conte, Thomas M.},
title = {Wrangling Rogues: A Case Study on Managing Experimental Post-Moore Architectures},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Practice and Experience in Advanced Research Computing on Rise of the Machines (Learning)},
series = {PEARC ’19},
year = {2019},
isbn = {978-1-4503-7227-5},
location = {Chicago, IL, USA},
pages = {61:1–61:8},
articleno = {61},
numpages = {8},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/3332186.3332223},
doi = {10.1145/3332186.3332223},
acmid = {3332223},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
}
Text Acknowledgment (Work Without a Bibliography)
“This research was supported in part through research infrastructure and services provided by the Rogues Gallery testbed hosted by the Center for Research into Novel Computing Hierarchies (CRNCH) at Georgia Tech. The Rogues Gallery testbed is primarily supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under NSF Award Number #2016701. Any opinions, findings and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s), and do not necessarily reflect those of the NSF.”