2012-02-17

[Caml-list] Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics, last call for papers

CICM 2012 - Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
July 9-13, 2012 at Jacobs University, Bremen, Germany

http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/cicm2012/

Call for Papers
----------------------------------------------------------------

As computers and communications technology advance, greater
opportunities arise for intelligent mathematical computation. While
computer algebra, automated deduction, mathematical publishing and
novel user interfaces individually have long and successful histories,
we are now seeing increasing opportunities for synergy among these
areas. The Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics offers a
venue for discussing these areas and their synergy.

The conference will be organized by Serge Autexier and Michael
Kohlhase at Jacobs University in Bremen and consist of five tracks:

Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation (AISC)
Co-Chairs: John A. Campbell, Jacques Carette
Calculemus
Chair: Gabriel Dos Reis
Digital Mathematical Libraries (DML)
Chair: Petr Sojka
Mathematical Knowledge Management (MKM)
Chair: Makarius Wenzel
Systems and Projects
Chair: Volker Sorge

The overall programme will be organized by the General Program Chair
Johan Jeuring.

Invited talks will be given by:

Yannis Haralambous, Département Informatique, Télécom Bretagne
Conor McBride, Department of Computer and Information Sciences,
University of Strathclyde
Cezar Ionescu, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

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Important dates
----------------------------------------------------------------

Abstract submission: 20 February 2012
Submission deadline: 26 February 2012
Reviews sent to authors: 23 March 2012
Rebuttals due: 30 March 2012
Notification of acceptance: 6 April 2012
Camera ready copies due: 20 April 2012
Conference: 9-13 July 2012

----------------------------------------------------------------
Tracks
----------------------------------------------------------------

*** AISC ***

Symbolic computation can be roughly described as the study of
algorithms which operate on expression trees. Another way to phrase
this is to say that the denotational semantics of expressions trees is
not fixed, but is rather context dependent. Expression simplification
is probably the archetypal symbolic computation. Mathematically
oriented software (such as the so-called computer algebra systems)
have been doing this for decades, but not long thereafter, systems
doing proof planning and theorem discovery also started doing the
same; some attempts at knowledge management and 'expert systems' were
also symbolic, but less successfully so. More recently, many different
kinds of program analyses have gotten `symbolic', as well as some of
the automated theorem proving (SMT, CAV, etc).

But a large number of the underlying problems solved by symbolic
techniques are well known to be undecidable (never mind the many that
are EXP-time complete, etc). Artificial Intelligence has been
attacking many of these different sub-problems for quite some time,
and has also built up a solid body of knowledge. In fact, most
symbolic computation systems grew out of AI projects.

These two fields definitely intersect. One could say that in the
intersection lies all those problems for which we have no decision
procedures. In other words, decision procedures mark a definite phase
shift in our understanding, but are not always possible. Yet we still
want to solve certain problems, and must find 'other' means of
(partial) solution. This is the fertile land which comprises the core
of AISC.

Rather than try to exhaustively list topics of interest, it is
simplest to say that AISC seeks work which advances the understanding
of

Solving problems which fundamentally involve the manipulation of
expressions, but for which decision procedures are unlikely to ever
exist.


*** Calculemus ***

Calculemus is a series of conferences dedicated to the integration of
computer algebra systems (CAS) and systems for mechanised reasoning,
the interactive theorem provers or proof assistants (PA) and the
automated theorem provers (ATP). Currently, symbolic computation is
divided into several (more or less) independent branches: traditional
ones (e.g., computer algebra and mechanised reasoning) as well as
newly emerging ones (on user interfaces, knowledge management, theory
exploration, etc.) The main concern of the Calculemus community is to
bring these developments together in order to facilitate the theory,
design, and implementation of integrated systems for computer
mathematics that will routinely be used by mathematicians, computer
scientists and engineers in their every day business.

The topics of interest of Calculemus include but are not limited to:

* Theorem proving in computer algebra (CAS)
* Computer algebra in theorem proving (PA and ATP)
* Case studies and applications that both involve computer
algebra and mechanised reasoning
* Representation of mathematics in computer algebra
* Adding computational capabilities to PA and ATP
* Formal methods requiring mixed computing and proving
* Combining methods of symbolic computation and formal
deduction
* Mathematical computation in PA and ATP
* Theory, design and implementation of interdisciplinary
systems for computer mathematics
* Theory exploration techniques
* Input languages, programming languages, types and constraint
languages, and modeling languages for mechanised
mathematics systems (PA, CAS, and ATP).
* Infrastructure for mathematical services

*** DML ***

Mathematicians dream of a digital archive containing all peer-reviewed
mathematical literature ever published, properly linked, validated and
verified. It is estimated that the entire corpus of mathematical
knowledge published over the centuries does not exceed 100,000,000
pages, an amount easily manageable by current information
technologies. Following success of DML 2008, DML 2009 DML 2010, and
DML 2011 track objectives are to formulate the strategy and goals of a
global mathematical digital library and to summarize the current
successes and failures of ongoing technologies and related projects as
EuDML, asking such questions as:

* What technologies, standards, algorithms and formats should
be used and what metadata should be shared?
* What business models are suitable for publishers of
mathematical literature, authors and funders of their
projects and institutions?
* Is there a model of sustainable, interoperable, and
extensible mathematical library that mathematicians
can use in their everyday work?
* What is the best practice for
* retrodigitized mathematics (from images via OCR to
MathML or TeX);
* retro-born-digital mathematics (from existing
electronic copy in DVI, PS or PDF to MathML or
TeX);
* born-digital mathematics (how to make needed
metadata and file formats available as a side
effect of publishing workflow [CEDRAM/Euclid
model])?

DML is an opportunity to share experience and best practices between
projects in any area (MKM, NLP, OCR, pattern recognition, whatever)
that could change the paradigm for searching, accessing, and
interacting with the mathematical corpus. The track is
trans/interdisciplinary and contributions from any kind of people on
any aspect of the DML building are welcome.

*** MKM ***

Mathematical Knowledge Management is an interdisciplinary field of
research in the intersection of mathematics, computer science, library
science, and scientific publishing. The objective of MKM is to develop
new and better ways of managing sophisticated mathematical knowledge,
based on innovative technology of computer science, the Internet, and
intelligent knowledge processing. MKM is expected to serve
mathematicians, scientists, and engineers who produce and use
mathematical knowledge; educators and students who teach and learn
mathematics; publishers who offer mathematical textbooks and
disseminate new mathematical results; and librarians and
mathematicians who catalog and organize mathematical knowledge.

The conference is concerned with all aspects of mathematical knowledge
management. A non-exclusive list of important topics includes:

* Representations of mathematical knowledge
* Authoring languages and tools
* Repositories of formalized mathematics
* Deduction systems
* Mathematical digital libraries
* Diagrammatic representations
* Mathematical OCR
* Mathematical search and retrieval
* Math assistants, tutoring and assessment systems
* MathML, OpenMath, and other mathematical content standards
* Web presentation of mathematics
* Data mining, discovery, theory exploration
* Computer algebra systems
* Collaboration tools for mathematics
* Challenges and solutions for mathematical workflows

*** Systems and Projects ***

The Systems and Projects track of the Conferences on Intelligent
Computer Mathematics is a forum for presentation of systems and new
and ongoing projects in all areas and topics related to the CICM
conferences:

* AI and Symbolic Computation
* Deduction and Computer Algebra
* Mathematical Knowledge Management
* Digital Mathematical Libraries

The track aims to provide an overview of the latest developments and
trends within the CICM community as well as to exchange ideas between
developers and introduce systems to an audience of potential users.

We solicit submissions for two page abstracts in the categories of
system descriptions and project presentations. System description
should present

* newly developed systems,
* systems that have not previously been presented to the CICM
community, or
* significant updates to existing systems.

Project presentation should describe

* projects that are new or about to start,
* ongoing projects that have not yet been presented to the
CICM community.
* significant new developments in ongoing previously presented
projects.

All submissions should contain links to demos, downloadable systems,
or project pages. Availability of such accompanying material will be a
strong prerequisite for acceptance.

Accepted abstracts will be published in the CICM proceedings in
Springer's LNAI series. Author's are expected to present their
abstracts in 5-10 minute teaser talks followed by an open demo/poster
session. System papers must be accompanied by a system demonstration,
while project papers must be accompanied by a poster presentation.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Submitting
----------------------------------------------------------------

Submissions to tracks A to D must not exceed 15 pages and will be
reviewed and evaluated with respect to relevance, clarity, quality,
originality, and impact. Shorter papers, e.g., for system
descriptions, are welcome. Authors will have an opportunity to respond
to their papers' reviews before the programme committee makes a
decision.

Submissions to the Systems & Projects track must not exceed four
pages. The accepted abstracts will be presented at CICM in a fast
presentation session, followed by an open demo/poster session. System
papers must be accompanied by a system demonstration, and project
papers must be accompanied by a poster presentation. The four pages of
the abstract should be new material, accompanied by links to
demos/downloads/project-pages and [existing] system descriptions.
Availability of such accompanying material will be a strong
prerequisite for acceptance.

Accepted conference submissions from all tracks will be published as a
volume in the series Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI)
by Springer. In addition to these formal proceedings, authors are
permitted and encouraged to publish the final versions of their papers
on arXiv.org.

Work-in-progress submissions are intended to provide a forum for the
presentation of original work that is not (yet) in a suitable form for
submission as a full or system description paper. This includes work
in progress and emerging trends. Their size is not limited, but we
recommend 5 - 10 pages.

The programme committee may offer authors of rejected formal
submissions to publish their contributions as work-in-progress papers
instead. Depending on the number of work-in-progress papers accepted,
they will be presented at the conference either as short talks or as
posters. The work-in-progress proceedings will be published as a
technical report.

All papers should be prepared in LaTeX and formatted according to the
requirements of Springer's LNCS series (the corresponding style files
can be downloaded from
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html). By submitting a paper
the authors agree that if it is accepted at least one of the authors
will attend the conference to present it.

Electronic submission is done through easychair
(http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cicm2012).

----------------------------------------------------------------
Program Committees
----------------------------------------------------------------

General chair: Johan Jeuring (Utrecht University and Open Universiteit
the Netherlands)

AISC track
John A. Campbell; University College London, UK; Co-chair
Jacques Carette; McMaster University, Canada; Co-chair
Serge Autexier; DFKI Bremen, Germany
Jacques Calmet; University of Karlsruhe, Germany
Jacques Fleuriot; University of Edinburgh, UK
Andrea Kohlhase; International University Bremen, Germany
Erik Postma; Maplesoft Inc., Canada
Alan Sexton; University of Birmingham, UK
Chung-chieh Shan; Cornell University, USA.
Stephen Watt; University of Western Ontario, Canada

Calculemus track
Gabriel Dos Reis; Texas A&M University, USA; Chair
Andrea Asperti; University of Bologna, Italy
Laurent Bernardin; Maplesoft, Canada
James Davenport; University of Bath, UK
Ruben Gamboa; University of Wyoming, USA
Mark Giesbrecht; University of Waterloo, Canada
Sumit Gulwani; Microsoft Research, USA
John Harrison; Intel, USA
Joris van der Hoeven; École Polytechnique, France
Hoon Hong; North Carolina State University, USA
Loïc Pottier; INRIA, France
Wolfgang Windsteiger; RISC, Austria

DML track
Petr Sojka; Masaryk University, Brno, CZ; Chair
José Borbinha; Technical University of Lisbon, PT
Thierry Bouche; University Grenoble, FR
Michael Doob; University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, CA
Thomas Fischer; Goettingen University, DE
Yannis Haralambous; Télécom Bretagne, FR
Václav Hlaváč; Czech Technical University, Prague, CZ
Michael Kohlhase; Jacobs University Bremen, DE
Janka Chlebíková; Portsmouth University, UK
Enrique Maciás-Virgós; University of Santiago de Compostela,
ES
Bruce Miller; NIST, USA
Jiří Rákosník; Academy of Sciences, Prague, CZ
Eugenio Rocha; University of Aveiro, PT
David Ruddy; Cornell University, US
Volker Sorge; University of Birmingham, UK
Masakazu Suzuki; Kyushu University, JP

MKM track
Makarius Wenzel; University of Paris-South, France; Chair
David Aspinall; University of Edinburgh, Scotland
Jeremy Avigad; Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Mateja Jamnik; University of Cambridge, UK
Cezary Kaliszyk; University of Tsukuba, Japan
Manfred Kerber; University of Birmingham, UK
Christoph Lüth; DFKI Bremen, Germany
Adam Naumowicz; University of Białystok, Poland
Jim Pitman; University of California, Berkeley, USA
Pedro Quaresma; Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal
Florian Rabe; Jacobs University Bremen, Germany
Claudio Sacerdoti Coen; University of Bologna, Italy
Enrico Tassi; INRIA Saclay, France
Freek Wiedijk; Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Systems & Projects track
Volker Sorge; University of Birmingham, UK; Chair
Josef Baker; University of Birmingham, UK
John Charnley; Imperial College, UK
Manuel Kauers; RISC, Austria
Koji Nakagawa; Kyushu University, Japan
Piotr Rudnicki; University of Alberta, Canada
Josef Urban; Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Richard Zanibbi; Rochester Institute of Technologies, USA

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2012-02-14

[Caml-list] Call for papers - CORCS 2012: The 4th IEEE International Workshop on Component-Based Design of Resource-Constrained Systems

We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this email.
..........................................................
            4th IEEE International Workshop on
               Component-Based Design of
             Resource-Constrained Systems
                     CORCS 2012

http://compsac.cs.iastate.edu/workshop_details.php?id=55&y

        Izmir, Turkey, July 16 – July 20, 2012
            (in conjunction with COMPSAC 2012)
..........................................................
 

Aims and Scope
--------------

The aim of this workshop is to discuss but also advance the
state-of-the-art, research and development in the area of resource
aware systems, and to promote the study of both fundamental
and practical aspects of component based design of such systems.
Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings of
COMPSAC 2012, by the IEEE Computer Society Press.
Any submission whose content is relevant to the area of resource-aware
system design will be considered, but any submission whose subject matter
is related to one of the following topics will be particularly welcome:

• Modeling and Specifying Resource-aware Systems
           - models for software components and component interaction: real-time, safety-critical, embedded, or mobile systems
           - specification of extra-functional properties of components
           - resource models
           - componentization of legacy code
           - certification of components and software architectures
           - service-oriented architectures

• Analysis Techniques
           - formal techniques for verification and validation of component software: model-checking, abstraction, code synthesis, testing, monitoring, debugging, model extraction
           - static analysis techniques
           - compositional theories of refinement
           - resource-usage impact on quality of service (QoS) attributes

• Platform-aware Design
           - run-time mechanisms and middleware
           - scheduling and resource management
           - component-driven hardware-software co-design

• Tools and Case-studies
           - applications, experience reports and case studies in component software
           - tools for resource-constrained system development

Important Dates:
----------------

* March 15th, 2012: Deadline for paper submission
* April 9th, 2012 : Notification of acceptance/rejection
* May 2nd, 2012: Camera-ready due

Program Committee:
------------------

* Tughrul Arslan (Univ. of Edinburgh, UK)
* Ivica Crnkovic (Mälardalen Univ., Sweden)
* Alexandre David (Aalborg Univ., Denmark)
* Paola Inverardi (Univ. of L'Aquila, Italy)
* Insup Lee (Univ. Of Pennsylvania, USA)
* Rafaella Mirandola (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
* Thomas Nolte (Mälardalen Univ., Sweden)
* Heinz Schmidt (RMIT Univ., Australia)
*
Bernhard Schätz (Technical Univ. Munich, Germany)
* Ana Sokolova (Univ. of Salzburg, Austria)
* Dragos Truscan (Åbo Akademi, Finland)
*
  Petr Tuma (Charles University, Czech Republic)
* Wang Yi (Uppsala Univ., Sweden)

Paper Submission:
-----------------

Papers must be submitted electronically via the CORCS 2012 Submission Page (http://rs.cs.iastate.edu/CORCS2012/).
The format of submitted papers should follow the guidelines for the IEEE conference proceedings.
All papers will be carefully reviewed by at least three reviewers. Papers should be no more than 6 pages. 

Organizers:
-----------

* Cristina Seceleanu, Mälardalen Univ., Sweden;
   cristina.seceleanu@mdh.se

* Tiziana Margaria, Univ. of Potsdam, Germany;
   margaria@cs.uni-potsdam.de

* Paul Pettersson, Mälardalen Univ., Sweden;
  
paul.pettersson@mdh.se

2012-02-13

[Caml-list] SFM-12:MDE in Bertinoro -- second call for participation

***********************************************************
* *
* SFM-12:MDE *
* *
* 12th International School on *
* Formal Methods for the Design of *
* Computer, Communication and Software Systems: *
* Model-Driven Engineering *
* *
* Bertinoro (Italy), 18-23 June 2012 *
* *
* http://www.sti.uniurb.it/events/sfm12mde/ *
* *
***********************************************************
* CALL FOR PARTICIPATION *
* (deadline: 21 March 2012) *
***********************************************************


GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT SFM
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Formal methods are emerging in computer science as a prominent
approach to the rigorous design of computer, communication and
software systems.

The aim of the SFM series is to offer a good spectrum of
current research in foundations as well as applications of
formal methods, which can be of interest for graduate students
and young researchers who intend to approach the field.

This year SFM is devoted to model-driven engineering and covers
topics such as modeling languages, model transformations, functional
and performance modeling and analysis, and model evolution.


COURSES AND LECTURERS
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The school features the following lectures and lab sessions:

"MDE Basics with a UML Focus"
Bran Selic (Malina Software Corporation, CA)

"MDE Basics with a DSL Focus"
Mark van den Brand (Tech. Univ. Eindhoven, NL)

"The Object Constraint Language"
Jordi Cabot (Ecole de Mines de Nantes, FR)

"Model Transformations"
Alfonso Pierantonio (Univ. L'Aquila, IT)

"Graph Transformations"
Holger Giese (Univ. Potsdam, DE)

"Abstractions for Behavior Validation"
Sebastian Uchitel (Imperial College London, UK)

"Software Performance Modeling"
Dorina Petriu (Carleton Univ. Ottawa, CA)

"Model Transformations in Non-Functional Analysis"
Steffen Becker (Univ. Paderborn, DE)

"Performance Antipatterns: Modeling and Analysis"
Vittorio Cortellessa (Univ. L'Aquila, IT)

"Model Versioning"
Gerti Kappel (Tech. Univ. Wien, AT)

"Model Evolution Management"
Krzysztof Czarnecki (Univ. Waterloo, CA)

"Formal Specification and Testing of Model Transformations"
Antonio Vallecillo (Univ. Malaga, ES)

All participants will receive a copy of a tutorial book published by
Springer as a volume in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science series.


LOCATION
^^^^^^^^

SFM-12:MDE will be held in the medieval hilltop town of Bertinoro.

This town is in Emilia Romagna, about 70 km south-east of Bologna,
at an elevation of about 230 m. It can be reached in a couple of
hours from the international airport "G. Marconi" of Bologna by
shuttle (from the airport to the railway station) + train (from
Bologna to Forli`) + bus/taxi (from the railway station to Bertinoro).
The closest airport is the "L. Ridolfi" airport of Forli`, which is
13 km away.

Bertinoro is close to many splendid locations such as Urbino,
Gradara, San Leo, and the Republic of San Marino, as well as some
less well-known locations like the thermal springs of Fratta Terme.

Bertinoro can also be a base for visiting some of the better-known
Italian locations such as Bologna, Rimini, Ravenna, Ferrara, Venezia,
Padova, Verona, Firenze, Pisa, and Siena.

Bertinoro itself is picturesque, with its narrow streets and
walkways winding around the central peak. The school will be held
at the Centro Residenziale Universitario (CRU), an ex-episcopal
fortress that has been converted by the University of Bologna into
a modern conference center with computing facilities and Internet
access. From the fortress, it is possible to enjoy a beautiful vista
stretching from the Apennines to the Adriatic coast and the Alps
over the Po Valley.


ORGANIZATION
^^^^^^^^^^^^

Scientific directors:
* Marco Bernardo (University of Urbino, IT)
* Vittorio Cortellessa (University of L'Aquila, IT)
* Alfonso Pierantonio (University of L'Aquila, IT)

Secretary:
* Monica Michelacci (CRU Bertinoro, IT)


APPLICATION
^^^^^^^^^^^

Prospective participants should send by 21 March 2012
the application form, available on the school web site,
to the two e-mail addresses below:

Marco Bernardo
bernardo AT sti.uniurb.it

Monica Michelacci
mmichelacci AT ceub.it

The registration fee is 600 euros and includes the school material.

The accommodation fee is 350 euros and covers the period June 17-24
(7 nights) in double room (to share with another participant),
half board (breakfast and lunch, dinner of June 17 included,
lunch of June 24 excluded).

The reduced accommodation fee for the participants who do not
need a room is 100 euros and covers the period June 18-23
(6 lunches).

A very limited number of grants is available to cover part
of the registration fee (no grant can be requested to cover
the accommodation fee or the travel expenses).

Notification of accepted/rejected applications and grant requests
will be communicated by March 31.

Registration to the school is due by April 20.

No refund is possible for cancellation after May 15.

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2012-02-10

[Caml-list] FMCAD'12: Preliminary Call For Papers

FMCAD 2012 - FORMAL METHODS IN COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN
PRELIMINARY CALL FOR PAPERS
International Conference on Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design
http://www.fmcad.org
Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK, October 22 - 25, 2012

IMPORTANT DATES

Abstract Submission: May 9

Paper Submission: May 20

Author Notification: July 13

Final Version: August 10

Conference: October 22 - 25


CONFERENCE SCOPE

FMCAD 2012 is the twelfth in a series of conferences on the theory and application of formal methods in hardware and system design and verification. FMCAD provides a leading international forum to researchers and practitioners in academia and industry for presenting and discussing novel methods, technologies, theoretical results, and tools for formal reasoning about computing systems, as well as open challenges therein.


TOPICS OF INTEREST

Advances in model checking, theorem proving, equivalence checking, abstraction and reduction techniques, compositional methods, automatic decision procedures at the bit- and word-level, probabilistic methods, and combinations of deductive methods and decision procedures.
Topics related to the application of formal and semi-formal methods to functional and non-functional specification and validation of hardware and software. This includes timing and power modeling, and verification of computing systems on all levels of abstraction.
System-level design and verification, especially for embedded systems, HW/SW co-design and verification, and transaction-level verification.
Modeling and specification languages, formal semantics of known languages or their subsets, model-based design, design derivation and transformation, and correct-by-construction methods.
Experience with the application of formal and semi-formal methods to industrial-scale designs. Tools that represent formal verification enablement, new features, or a substantial improvement in the automation of formal methods.
Application of formal methods in new areas.


SUBMISSIONS

Submissions must be made electronically in PDF format via EasyChair. More details will be provided soon on the FMCAD web site.
The proceedings will be freely available from the FMCAD Web site. We expect to have ACM In-Cooperation Status and IEEE Technical Co-Sponsorship, as has been the case with previous FMCAD conferences. FMCAD and authors will share the copyright for accepted papers and we plan on publishing the proceedings in the ACM Digital Library and in IEEE Xplore.
Two categories of papers can be submitted: regular papers (8 pages), containing original research; and short papers (4 pages), containing emerging results, practical experiences or original ideas that can be described succinctly.
Regular and short papers must use the IEEE Transactions format on letter-size paper with a 10-point font size, see http://www.ieee.org/portal/pages/pubs/transactions/stylesheets.html. We recommend that self-citations be written in the third person. Submissions must contain original research that has not been previously published, nor concurrently submitted for publication. Any partial overlap with any published or concurrently submitted paper must be clearly indicated. If experimental results are reported, authors are strongly encouraged to provide adequate access to their data so that results can be independently verified.
A small number of accepted papers will be considered for a distinguished paper award.


ASSOCIATED EVENTS

The Hardware Model Checking Competition 2012 (HWMCC2012) will take place during FMCAD 2012.


GENERAL CHAIRS

Gianpiero Cabodi, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
Satnam Singh, Google, USA


STEERING COMMITTEE

Jason Baumgartner, IBM, USA
Aarti Gupta, NEC Labs America, USA
Warren Hunt, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Panagiotis Manolios, Northeastern University, USA
Mary Sheeran, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

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2012-02-02

[Caml-list] SAT 2012: Final Call for Papers

[ We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this CFP. ]

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
15th International Conference on
THEORY AND APPLICATIONS OF SATISFIABILITY TESTING
--- SAT 2012 ---

Trento, Italy, June 17-20th, 2012
http://sat2012.fbk.eu/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

AIM and SCOPE
=============

The International Conference on Theory and Applications of
Satisfiability Testing (SAT) is the primary annual meeting for
researchers studying the propositional satisfiability
problem. Importantly, here SAT is interpreted in a rather broad sense:
besides plain propositional satisfiability, it includes the domains of
MaxSAT and Pseudo-Boolean (PB) constraints, Quantified Boolean
Formulae (QBF), Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT), Constraints
Programming (CSP) techniques for word-level problems and their
propositional encoding.

To this extent, many hard combinatorial problems can be encoded as SAT
instances, in the broad sense mentioned above, including problems that
arise in hardware and software verification, AI planning and
scheduling, OR resource allocation, etc. The theoretical and practical
advances in SAT research over the past twenty years have contributed
to making SAT technology an indispensable tool in these domains.

SAT 2012 will take place in Trento, Italy, a cosmopolitan city set in
a spectacular mountain scenery, and home to a world-class university
and research centres.

RELEVANT TOPICS
===============

The topics of the conference span practical and theoretical research
on SAT (in the broader sense above) and its applications, and include,
but are not limited to:

* Theoretical issues
- Combinatorial Theory of SAT
- Proof Systems and Proof Complexity in SAT
- Analysis of SAT Algorithms
* Solving:
- Improvements of current solving procedures
- Novel solving procedures, techniques and heuristics
- Incremental solving
* Beyond solving:
- Functionalities (e.g., proofs, unsat-cores, interpolants,...)
- Optimization
* Applications
- SAT techniques for other domains
- Novel Problem Encodings
- Novel Industrial Applications of SAT

A more detailed description can be found on the web site.

INVITED SPEAKERS
================

We are honored to announce the following invited speakers at SAT 2012:

* Aaron Bradley, Boulder, USA.
"SAT-based Verification with IC3: Foundations and Demands"

* Donald Knuth, Stanford, USA.
"Satisfiability and The Art of Computer Programming"

The presence of both speakers has been confirmed, although the titles
of the talks may be provisional.

AFFILIATED EVENTS
=================

SAT 2012 is co-located with the 2nd International SAT/SMT Summer School
(June 12-15), http://satsmtschool2012.fbk.eu/.

SAT 2012 will also host related events like workshops (June 16) and various
competitive events.

PAPER SUBMISSION
================

Papers must be edited in LATEX using the LNCS format and
be submitted electronically as PDF files via EasyChair.
We envisage three categories of submissions:

REGULAR PAPERS. Submissions, not exceeding fourteen (14) pages, should
contain original research, and sufficient detail to assess the
merits and relevance of the contribution. For papers reporting
experimental results, authors are strongly encouraged to make their
data available with their submission. Submissions reporting on case
studies in an industrial context are strongly invited, and should
describe details, weaknesses and strength in sufficient
depth. Simultaneous submission to other conferences with proceedings
or submission of material that has already been published elsewhere
is not allowed.

TOOL PRESENTATIONS. Submissions, not exceeding six (6) pages, should
describe the implemented tool and its novel features. A
demonstration is expected to accompany a tool presentation. Papers
describing tools that have already been presented in other
conferences before will be accepted only if significant and clear
enhancements to the tool are reported and implemented.

EXTENDED ABSTRACTS/POSTERS. Submissions, not exceeding two (2) pages,
briefly introducing work in progress, student work, or preliminary
results. These papers are expected to be presented as posters at the
conference.

Further information about paper submission, including a more detailed
description of the scope and specification of the three submission
categories, will be made available at SAT 2012 web page. The review
process will be subject to a rebuttal phase.

IMPORTANT DATES:
================
Abstract Submission: 05/02/2012
Paper Submission: 12/02/2012
Rebuttal phase: 28-30/03/2012
Final Notification: 12/04/2012
Final Version Due: 04/05/2012

SAT/SMT School: 12-15/06/2012
Workshops: 16/06/2012
Conference: 17-20/06/2012

PROCEEDINGS
===========

The proceedings of SAT 2012 will be published by Springer-Verlag in the
LNCS series.

PROGRAM CHAIRS
==============

Alessandro Cimatti -- FBK-Irst, Trento, Italy
Roberto Sebastiani -- DISI, University of Trento, Italy

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
=================

Dimitris Achlioptas -- UC Santa Cruz, USA
Fahiem Bacchus -- University of Toronto, Canada
Paul Beame -- University of Washington, USA
Armin Biere -- Johannes Kepler University, Austria
Randal Bryant -- Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Uwe Bubeck -- University of Paderborn, Germany
Nadia Creignou -- Aix-Marseille Université, France
Leonardo DeMoura -- Microsoft Research, USA
John Franco -- University of Cincinnati, USA
Malay Ganai -- NEC, USA
Enrico Giunchiglia -- Università di Genova, Italy
Youssef Hamadi -- Microsoft Research, UK
Zyiad Hanna -- Jasper, USA
Holger Hoos -- University of British Columbia, Canada
Marijn Heule -- Johannes Kepler University, Austria
Kazuo Iwama -- Kyoto University, Japan
Oliver Kullmann -- Swansea University, UK
Daniel Le Berre -- Université d'Artois, France
Ines Lynce -- Instituto Superior Técnico, Portugal
Panagiotis Manolios -- Northeastern University, USA
Joao Marques-Silva -- University College Dublin, Ireland
David Mitchell -- Simon Fraser University, Canada
Alexander Nadel -- Intel, Israel
Jussi Rintanen -- The Austrailan National University, Australia
Lakhdar Sais -- Université d'Artois, France
Karem Sakallah -- University of Michigan, USA
Bart Selman -- Cornell University, USA
Laurent Simon -- Université Paris 11, France
Carsten Sinz -- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
Niklas Sorensson -- Chalmers University, Sweden
Ofer Strichman -- Technion, Israel
Stefan Szeider -- Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Allen Van Gelder -- University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
Toby Walsh -- University of New South Wales, Australia
Xishun Zhao -- Sun Yat-Sen University, China

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