TY - BOOK AU - Laganá,Antonio AU - Gavrilova,Marina L. AU - Kumar,Vipin AU - Mun,Youngsong AU - Tan,C.J.Kenneth AU - Gervasi,Osvaldo ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Computational Science and Its Applications – ICCSA 2004: International Conference, Assisi, Italy, May 14-17, 2004, Proceedings, Part III T2 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, SN - 9783540247678 AV - QA76.6-76.66 U1 - 005.11 23 PY - 2004/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg KW - Computer science KW - Information theory KW - Information systems KW - Mathematics KW - Computer Science KW - Programming Techniques KW - Theory of Computation KW - Mathematics of Computing KW - Information Systems and Communication Service KW - Computer Applications KW - Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis N1 - Workshop on Computational Geometry and Applications (CGA 04) -- Track on Computational Geometry -- Track on Adaptive Algorithms -- Track on Biology, Biochemistry, Bioinformatics -- Track on Cluster Computing -- Track on Computational Medicine -- Track on Computational Methods -- Track on Computational Science Education -- Track on Computer Modeling and Simulation -- Track on Financial and Economical Modeling -- Track on Mobile Computing Systems N2 - The natural mission of Computational Science is to tackle all sorts of human problems and to work out intelligent automata aimed at alleviating the b- den of working out suitable tools for solving complex problems. For this reason ComputationalScience,thoughoriginatingfromtheneedtosolvethemostch- lenging problems in science and engineering (computational science is the key player in the ?ght to gain fundamental advances in astronomy, biology, che- stry, environmental science, physics and several other scienti?c and engineering disciplines) is increasingly turning its attention to all ?elds of human activity. In all activities, in fact, intensive computation, information handling, kn- ledge synthesis, the use of ad-hoc devices, etc. increasingly need to be exploited and coordinated regardless of the location of both the users and the (various and heterogeneous) computing platforms. As a result the key to understanding the explosive growth of this discipline lies in two adjectives that more and more appropriately refer to Computational Science and its applications: interoperable and ubiquitous. Numerous examples of ubiquitous and interoperable tools and applicationsaregiveninthepresentfourLNCSvolumescontainingthecontri- tions delivered at the 2004 International Conference on Computational Science and its Applications (ICCSA 2004) held in Assisi, Italy, May 14–17, 2004 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b98053 ER -