Registration now open for the 2021 Testing and Verification Symposium

The annual Facebook Testing and Verification (TAV) Symposium brings science and industry together in an open environment to exchange ideas and present the top experts from scientific research and practice in testing and verification.

This year, the fifth annual TAV symposium will take place virtually from Wednesday, December 1 to Thursday, December 2, 2021. The event is open to all practitioners and researchers in the field of testing and verification and is free of charge. On the agenda of the symposium are 10 lectures, which offer the opportunity for questions and answers via the event platform.

Interested parties can submit their registration request below.

TO REGISTER

“My Sapienz team is working with previous speakers on the ideas that were discussed at last year’s TAV symposium,” says Facebook Software Engineer Yue Jia. “The symposium is a great place to share the challenges we face and stimulate technology transfer from research findings into software testing and verification practices.”

Jia continues: “In addition to the great presentations, I enjoyed the discussions between the various test and verification communities at last year’s TAV Symposium. The symposium offers an open platform to combine research and practice in the areas of software testing, verification and validation. “

“The TAV Symposium is a unique place in the conference landscape, where test and verification, industry and science as well as theory and practice come together to form a community that realizes their common goal: to strengthen everyone’s trust in software,” says Software Engineer Jules Villard. “I can hardly wait to get to know this year’s TAV community and discover new ways of working together.”

Below is the list of confirmed speakers, which you can also find on the registration page. In the run-up to the event, as soon as further speakers are confirmed, they will be added to the registration page.

Confirmed speakers

Viktor Malik (Brno University of Technology)

Quentin Carbonneaux and Peter O’Hearn (Facebook)

Ke Mao (Facebook)

Azalea Council (Imperial College London)

Tao Xie (Beijing University)

Chunyang Chen (Monash University)

Isabel Min Li (Imperial College London)

Kinga Bojarczuk (Facebook)

Sebastian Bardin (Central Commission for Nuclear Energy)

For more information on the speakers, including full biographies and topics, visit the Registration page.

Comments are closed.