Welcome to the Young Architect Workshop!
A Workshop for Early-stage Graduate Students in Computer Architecture
The Young Architect Workshop (YArch, pronounced “why arch”) is a workshop for junior graduate
students and research-active undergraduate students studying computer architecture and related
fields. This year's we will attempt to organize YArch in conjunction with the 53rd International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA 2026) (pending approval).
The central theme of the YArch workshop is to serve as a welcoming venue for early-stage graduate
students (or undergrads interested in research) to present their ongoing work and receive feedback
from experts within the community. In addition, this workshop aims to help students in building
connections both with their peers and established architects in the community. To this end, YArch
will include:
- Route to Top-tier: Each submitted work will receive two or more expert reviews. The aim
of these reviews will be to give early guidance on important boxes to check for the submitted
work to be a future successful top tier conference paper.
- Meet an Architect: As part of the workshop, attendees will be paired with experts in
their chosen research area to get feedback on their ongoing work and future research directions.
- Becoming an Architect: The workshop will include keynote talks from academic and industry
leaders specifically geared towards early stage graduate students.
- Ask an Architect: The workshop will include a panel of established architects in industry
and academia from whom students can seek career advice.
IMPORTANT DATES
| Paper registration deadline (tentative): |
March 27, 2026 |
| Paper submission deadline (tentative): |
April 3, 2026 |
| Notification of acceptance (tentative): |
May 8, 2026 |
| Workshop date (tentative collocated with ISCA): |
June 27th or 28th, 2026 |
SUBMISSION SITE
https://yarch26.hotcrp.com
CONTACT
Email: youngarchitectw@gmail.com
ORGANIZERS
Olivia Hsu, CMU
Thomas Bourgeat, EPFL
Preliminary Program
| 8:45-9:00am
| Welcome |
| 9:00-5:00pm |
TBD: Keynotes, Panel, Lightning Talks, Round-table Mentoring, Lunch, Poster
|
| 5:00pm |
Closing Remarks |
Panel Discussion: TBD
Accepted Papers: TBD
SUBMIT
Eligibility
Applicants must be either (a) research-active undergraduate students aiming for graduate school, or
(b)
graduate students (Masters and/or PhD) in computer architecture and related fields who have
completed less
than 3 years of graduate school at the time of the workshop. A note from the student’s research
advisor
attesting this is required as part of the submission.
Eligible students are invited to submit their early stage or on-going work to this
workshop. Submitted work should not have been presented as part of a prior ACM/IEEE conference.
Note: This workshop is not a venue for publication and there will be no formal
proceedings.
Topics of Interest
The workshop invites papers from all areas of computer architecture, broadly defined. Topics of
interest
include, but not limited to:
- Datacenter systems
- Hardware acceleration
- Memory hierarchy
- Virtualization
- Security
- Microarchitecture
- GPUs
- Parallel architectures
- Emerging technologies
Submission Guidelines
The goal of this workshop is to help students think about a problem/idea in an holistic manner and
communicate your ideas to the wider community, so that we can provide some valuable early-stage
feedback. To
this end, we encourage you to cover the following aspects in your submission:
- Scope of problem/idea: Provide clear context for and scope of the problem(s) or idea(s)
you
intend to work on. This will likely form the basis of the introduction/background sections of
your
future work(s).
- Solution: Provide an overview of the design and implementation aspects of your
solution(s) to the
problem(s) described above. Given this is on-going work, focus more on providing breadth than
depth. For
example, beside describing the design of your idea, enlist the various system aspects which your
proposed solutions will affect (e.g. does your proposed solution affect coherence protocols?)
and that
if you plan to discuss these effects in your future submission(s).
- Evaluation methodology: Discuss the evaluation methodology you plan to adopt to test the
efficacy
of your ideas. For example, the workloads that you plan to use, the tools you’ll employ (e.g.,
architectural simulator, real world experiments, FPGA prototypes), etc.
- Related work: This can be the traditional related work section. Please specify if you
plan to
quantitatively compare against some prior work.
Submission Details
- Submissions must be PDF files, in 2-column, single-spaced, 10pt format, at most 2 pages long,
not
including references.
- Submissions are double-blind. Please do not have any author identifying
information in
the paper submitted.
- Please have your research advisor send the workshop organizers an email with the following
subject line
“<Your name> meets YArch’24 eligibility requirements” to youngarchitectw@gmail.com.
- Submission site: https://yarch26.hotcrp.com
Declaring Conflicts
When registering a submission, all its co-authors must provide information about conflicts with the
YArch’24
program committee members. You are conflicted with a member if:
- you are currently employed at the same institution, have been previously employed at the same
institution within the past two years (2020 or later), or are going to begin employment at the
same
institution;
- you have a past or present association as thesis advisor or advisee (no time limit);
- you have collaborated on a project, publication, grant proposal, or editorship within the past
two years
(2020 or later);
- or, you have spouse or first-degree relative relations.
Funding FAQ
- We aim to fund one person per paper (the presenter/first author).
- Depending on available funding we may only cover partial costs.
- We aim to fund the presenters from all accepted papers.
Sponsors: