2018-02-27

[Caml-list] DCM'18 Third Call for Papers

(Apologies for multiple copies of this announcement. Please circulate.)
========================================================================
                             DCM 2018 
  12th International Workshop on Developments in Computational Models
                 A satellite event of FLoC 2018, Oxford
                          July 8,  2018
========================================================================

Several new models of computation have emerged in the last years, and many developments of traditional computation models have been proposed with the aim of taking into account the new demands of users of computer systems and the new capabilities of computation engines.

The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers who are currently developing new computation models or new features for traditional computation models, in order to foster their interaction, to provide a forum for presenting new ideas and work in progress, and to enable newcomers to learn about current activities in this area. The proceedings are produced after the meeting, so that authors can incorporate the workshop feedback in the published papers.

DCM 2018 will take place in Oxford on July 8, as a one-day satellite event of FLoC 2018. This will be the 12th event in the series since 2005 - see the DCM website (http://dcm-workshop.org.uk/) for details of previous events.

INVITED SPEAKERS

We are pleased to announce the two invited speakers of DCM'18:

  *  Ugo Dal Lago  (University of Bologna)
  *  Delia Kesner  (University Paris-Diderot)

TOPICS OF INTEREST

Topics of interest include all abstract models of computation and their applications to the development of programming languages and systems. This includes (but is not limited to):

  * Functional calculi: lambda-calculus, pattern-calculi, combinatory logic, term and graph rewriting;
  * Object calculi;
  * Interaction-based systems: interaction nets, games, agent and multi-agent systems;
  * Concurrent models: process calculi, action graphs, distributed systems;
  * Calculi expressing locality, mobility, and active data;
  * Quantum computational models;
  * Biological or chemical models of computation;

SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION

Authors are invited to submit a short paper (max 8 pages). Preliminary proceedings will be available at the workshop. Papers should be written in English, and submitted in PostScript or PDF format, using the EPTCS style files (http://style.eptcs.org/). Submission is through the Easychair website. 

 
IMPORTANT DATES:

   * Submission deadline:            8 April 2018
   * Notification:                          15 May 2018
   * Pre-proceedings version:     27 May 2018
   * Workshop:                              8 July 2018
   * Full version of paper:       1 October 2018
   * Notification:                  1 December 2018
   * Final versions due:     15 December 2018

After the workshop authors are invited to submit a full paper taking into account the feedback given at their presentation. After a second round of refereeing, accepted contributions will appear in an issue of Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science (www.eptcs.org). 


PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

  * Sandra Alves, University of Porto - PC Chair 
  * Sabine Broda, University of Porto
  * Adriana Compagnoni, Stevens Institute of Technology
  * Nachum Dershowitz, University of Tel Aviv
  * Mariangiola Dezani, University of Torino
  * Alessandra Di Pierro, University of Verona
  * Maribel Fernández, King's College London
  * Russ Harmer, ENS Lyon
  * Edward Hermann Haeusler, PUC-Rio 
  * Luigi Liquori, INRIA Sophia
  * Elvira Mayordomo, University of Zaragoza
  * Simon Perdrix, LORIA-Nancy
  * Jamie Vicary, University of Oxford


CONTACT
For more information contact the organiser of the event:

Sandra Alves
DCC-FCUP and CRACS
University of Porto

[Caml-list] ICTCS 2018 @ Urbino - call for papers

====================================================================
ICTCS 2018 - 19th Italian Conference on Theoretical Computer Science

18-20 September 2018, Urbino, Italy

http://www.sti.uniurb.it/events/ictcs2018/

CALL FOR PAPERS
====================================================================

================
SCOPE AND TOPICS
================

The Italian Conference on Theoretical Computer Science (ICTCS)
is the conference of the Italian Chapter of the European Association
for Theoretical Computer Science.

The purpose of ICTCS is to foster the cross-fertilization of ideas
stemming from different areas of theoretical computer science.
In particular, ICTCS provides an ideal environment where
junior researchers and PhD students can meet senior researchers.
Contributions in any area of theoretical computer science are warmly
invited from researchers of all nationalities.

The topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
agents, algorithms, argumentation, automata theory, complexity theory,
computational logic, computational social choice, concurrency theory,
cryptography, discrete mathematics, distributed computing, dynamical systems,
formal methods, game theory, graph theory, knowledge representation,
languages, model checking, process algebras, quantum computing,
rewriting systems, security and trust, semantics, specification and
verification, systems biology, theorem proving, type theory.

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

Two types of contributions, written in English and formatted according
to Springer LNCS style, are solicited.

Regular papers: up to 12 pages, presenting original results not appeared
or submitted elsewhere. To ease the reviewing process, the authors of
regular papers may add an appendix, although reviewers are not required
to consider it in their evaluation.

Communications: up to 5 pages, suitable for extended abstracts of papers
already appeared/submitted or to be submitted elsewhere, as well as papers
reporting ongoing research on which the authors wish to get feedback and
overviews of PhD theses or research projects.

Authors are invited to submit their manuscripts in PDF format via EasyChair.

All accepted original contributions (regular papers and communications)
will be published on CEUR-WS.org.

For each accepted contribution, at least one of the authors is required
to attend the conference and present the paper.

As in previous years, we plan to publish a selection of the best papers
in a special issue of an international journal.

===============
IMPORTANT DATES
===============

Abstract submission: 17 May 2018
Paper submission: 24 May 2018
Notification: 30 June 2018
Final version: 20 July 2018

==========
COMMITTEES
==========

Program Chairs:

Alessandro Aldini (Università di Urbino "Carlo Bo", Italy)
Marco Bernardo (Università di Urbino "Carlo Bo", Italy)

Program Committee:

Marco Antoniotti (Università di Milano "Bicocca", Italy)
Franco Barbanera (Università di Catania, Italy)
Anna Bernasconi (Università di Pisa, Italy)
Davide Bilò (Università di Sassari, Italy)
Stefano Bistarelli (Università di Perugia, Italy)
Luca Bortolussi (Università di Trieste, Italy)
Tiziana Calamoneri (Università di Roma "Sapienza", Italy)
Antonio Caruso (Università del Salento, Italy)
Silvia Crafa (Università di Padova, Italy)
Ugo Dal Lago (Università di Bologna, Italy)
Gianlorenzo D'Angelo (Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy)
Moreno Falaschi (Università di Siena, Italy)
Gabriele Fici (Università di Palermo, Italy)
Michele Flammini (Università dell'Aquila & GSSI, Italy)
Dora Giammarresi (Università di Roma "Tor Vergata", Italy)
Paola Giannini (Università del Piemonte Orientale, Italy)
Flaminia Luccio (Università di Venezia "Ca' Foscari", Italy)
Isabella Mastroeni (Università di Verona, Italy)
Maria Chiara Meo (Università di Chieti e Pescara "G. d'Annunzio", Italy)
Emanuela Merelli (Università di Camerino, Italy)
Manuela Montangero (Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia, Italy)
Aniello Murano (Università di Napoli "Federico II", Italy)
Luca Padovani (Università di Torino, Italy)
Domenico Parente (Università di Salerno, Italy)
Simona Perri (Università della Calabria, Italy)
Carla Piazza (Università di Udine, Italy)
Giovanni Pighizzini (Università di Milano, Italy)
Giovanni Michele Pinna (Università di Cagliari, Italy)
Rosario Pugliese (Università di Firenze, Italy)
Paola Quaglia (Università di Trento, Italy)
Gianfranco Rossi (Università di Parma, Italy)
Pierluigi San Pietro (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
Simone Tini (Università dell'Insubria, Italy)
Mirco Tribastone (IMT Lucca, Italy)
Paola Vocca (Università della Tuscia, Italy)
Elena Zucca (Università di Genova, Italy)

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2018-02-26

[Caml-list] AISC 2018 Call for Papers

AISC 2018 Call for Papers

13th International Conference on
Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation
Suzhou, China, September 16-19, 2018

http://aisc2018.cc4cm.org


OVERVIEW

AISC is a forum for the exchange of ideas and the presentation of new tools
and solutions at the intersection of Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic
Computation. It aims to foster contacts and collaborations among researchers
from different fields related to AI and Symbolic Computation. The conference
is concerned with all aspects of research, including theory, implementations,
and applications.

AISC 2018 takes a broad view of AI that includes non-traditional areas such
as machine/deep learning and their interactions with logic and symbolic
reasoning. It will also have a special track on Collective Intelligence.

Conferences in this series are usually held every two years. The previous
five took place in Sevilla (Spain), Paris (France), Birmingham (United
Kingdom), Beijing (China), and Linz (Austria). AISC 2018 will take place in
Suzhou, China.


TOPICS

Specific topics for AISC 2018 include, but are not limited to:

* Cognitive modelling and symbolic AI
* Machine learning and computational intelligence
* Data modelling and analysis
* Knowledge representation and symbolic computing
* Knowledge acquisition, search, verification, and interoperation
* Automated reasoning and knowledge discovery
* Causal inferences, uncertainty reasoning, and decision support
* Cross-disciplinary knowledge management
* Mechanization of mathematics
* Mechanized program verification and debugging
* Combination of logics and computations
* Integration of logical reasoning and computer algebra
* Symbolic computations for expert systems and machine learning
* Computer vision and computer-aided geometric design
* Computer algebra systems and automated theorem provers
* Computer-based mathematics teaching and didactics
* Programming languages and systems for symbolic computation
* Emerging fields of computational AI


Topics for the special track on Collective Intelligence include, but are not
limited to:

* Human computation and collective intelligence
* Game theory and crowdsourcing computation
* Crowdsourcing software engineering
* Crowdsourcing publishing, reviewing, and competition systems


SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

Original research papers in English, including experimental work and work in
progress are welcome. The following types of submissions are invited.

* Regular papers: maximum 15 pages.

* Short papers: maximum 5 pages that address the following aspects explicitly.
- Problem: what is the problem/question/objective?
- Motivation: why are we working on the problem and what is its importance?
- State of the art: what has been done already on the problem?
- Contribution: what is the main original contribution?
- Main idea: what is the main idea underlying the contribution?

Additional information:

* The submissions should indicate whether they are submitted as short or
regular papers as part of their titles (see the AISC webpage for
instructions). Aside from this they should follow the standard
Springer LNCS Proceedings format.
* Electronic submission as PDF should be via EasyChair at
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aisc2018.
* Accepted papers must be presented at the conference.
* If you have any problems with the submission of your paper, or questions
concerning AISC 2018 or EasyChair, please contact aisc2018@easychair.org.


PUBLICATION

The proceedings of AISC 2018 will be published by Springer in its LNAI series
and will be available by the time of the conference.

As for previous editions of AISC, authors of selected conference papers may
be invited to submit extended versions for review and publication in the
special issue of a journal.


IMPORTANT DATES

* Abstract submission deadline: April 27, 2018
* Short/Regular paper submission deadline: May 4, 2018
* Author notification: June 29, 2018
* Camera-ready submission: July 11, 2018
* Early registration: August 18, 2018
* Conference: September 16-19, 2018


INVITED SPEAKERS (to be completed)

* Bruno Buchberger (Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
* Alan Bundy (University of Edinburgh, UK)


GENERAL CHAIRS

* Jacques Calmet (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
* Dongming Wang (Beihang University, China & CNRS, France)


PROGRAM COMMITTEE

* Jesus Aransay (University of la Rioja, Spain)
* Yves Bertot (Sophia Antipolis, France)
* Francisco Botana (University of Vigo, Spain)
* Krysia Broda (Imperial College, UK)
* Xiaoyu Chen (Beihang University, China)
* Mnacho Echenim (Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble, France)
* Matthew England (Coventry University, UK)
* Jacques Fleuriot (University of Edinburgh, UK), AISC 2018 PC Chair
* Xiao-Shan Gao (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
* Tetsuo Ida (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
* Paul Jackson (University of Edinburgh, UK)
* Predrag Janicic (University of Belgrade, Serbia)
* Deepak Kapur (University of New Mexico, USA)
* Michael Kohlhase (FAU Erlangen-Nurenberg, Germany)
* Ekaterina Komendantskaya (Heriot-Watt University, UK)
* Robert Y. Lewis (Vrije University Amsterdam, Netherlands)
* Xinjun Mao (National University of Defense Technology, China)
* Chenqi Mou (Beihang University, China)
* Julien Narboux (University of Strasbourg, France)
* Petros Papapanagiotou (University of Edinburgh, UK)
* Tomas Recio (University of Cantabria, Spain)
* Jose-Luis Ruiz-Reina (University of Seville, Spain)
* Carolyn Talcott (SRI International, USA)
* Laurent Thery (INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France)
* Yongxin Tong (Beihang University, China), Special Track Co-chair
* Josef Urban (Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic)
* Wolfgang Windsteiger (Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
* Ye Yuan (Northeastern University, China)
* Zimu Zhou (ETH Zurich, Switzerland), Special Track Co-chair


ORGANISING COMMITTEE

* Wenjun Wu (Beihang University, China), Chair
* Xiaoyu Chen (Beihang University, China)


PUBLICITY CHAIR

* Xiaohong Jia (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)


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2018-02-20

[Caml-list] Special Issue on Commonsense Reasoning - Call for Papers

CALL FOR PAPERS

Special Issue on Commonsense Reasoning

Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence

We invite submissions to the Special Issue on Commonsense Reasoning of
the journal Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence.

Papers should be submitted by June 30, 2018 via

http://www.editorialmanager.com/amai/

selecting the issue S692 Commonsense Reasoning.

Guest editors:

Andrew S. Gordon, University of Southern California
Rob Miller, University College London
Leora Morgenstern, Nuance
Gyorgy Turan, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of
Szeged.

Endowing computers with common sense is one of the major long-term
goals of Artificial Intelligence research. Commonsense knowledge and
reasoning are relevant for many applications of current
interest. Examples include robot and human collaboration, transparent
machine-learning systems that can explain their conclusions, social
media and story understanding software, and dialogue systems. The
recent resurgence of interest in commonsense reasoning reflects recent
technological advances which would greatly benefit from further
progress in commonsense reasoning, and a wider societal reaction to
these technological advances.

We welcome a wide variety of submissions on all relevant and rigorous
approaches to acquiring commonsense knowledge and performing
commonsense reasoning, including papers describing recent research and
survey papers on the state of the art of research directions within
the field.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to

Semantics-based representations for specific commonsense domains,
such as:

- Time, change, action, causality
- Commonsense physical and spatial reasoning
- Legal, biological, medical, and other scientific reasoning
incorporating elements of common sense
- Mental states such as beliefs, intentions, and emotions
- Social activities and relationships

Inference methods for commonsense reasoning, such as:

- Logic programming
- Probabilistic, heuristic, and approximate reasoning
- Nonmonotonic reasoning, belief revision and argumentation
- Abductive and inductive reasoning
- Textual Entailment

Methods for creating commonsense knowledge bases, such as:

- Statistical and corpus-based techniques, including both traditional
machine learning and deep learning
- Crowdsourcing
- Hand-crafting domain theories
- Hybrid methods

Applications of commonsense reasoning, especially interdisciplinary
research in the following areas:

- Natural language understanding (understanding discourse, question
answering, semantic parsing)
- Image understanding
- Cognitive robotics and planning
- Web-based applications (search, internet of things)
- Support technologies (computer-aided instruction, home automation)

Discussions of the science of commonsense reasoning research,
including:

- Meta-theorems about commonsense theories and techniques
- Relation to other fields, such as philosophy, linguistics, cognitive
psychology, game theory, and economics
- Challenge problem sets and benchmarking.

For more information, see http://commonsensereasoning.org


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[Caml-list] iFM 2018 Call for Papers

===========================================================
CALL FOR PAPERS
iFM 2018

14th International Conference on integrated Formal Methods
September 5-7, 2018, Maynooth, Ireland

https://ifm2018.cs.nuim.ie/
===========================================================

=== Important dates ===

Abstract submission: Monday, 16 April 2018
Paper submission: Friday, 20 April 2018
Notification: Thursday, 14 June 2018
Camera-ready copy: Tuesday, 1 July 2018
Conference: 5-7 September 2018

Deadlines expire at 23:59 anywhere on earth on the dates displayed
above.

=== Objectives and scope ===

Applying formal methods may involve the usage of different formalisms
and different analysis techniques to validate a system, either because
individual components are most amenable to one formalism or technique,
because one is interested in different properties of the system, or
simply to cope with the sheer complexity of the system. The iFM
conference series seeks to further research into hybrid approaches to
formal modeling and analysis: the combination of (formal and
semi-formal) methods for system development, regarding both modeling
and analysis. The conference covers all aspects from language design
through verification and analysis techniques to tools and their
integration into software engineering practice.

Areas of interest include but are not limited to:
- Formal and semi-formal modelling notations
- Combining formal methods
- Integration of formal methods into software engineering practice
- Program verification, model checking, and static analysis
- Theorem proving, decision procedures, SAT/SMT solving
- Runtime analysis, monitoring, and testing
- Program synthesis
- Analysis and synthesis of hybrid, embedded, probabilistic, distributed,
or concurrent systems
- Abstraction and refinement
- Model learning and inference

=== Submission guidelines ===

iFM 2018 solicits high quality papers reporting research results
and/or experience reports related to the overall theme of formal
method integration.

We accept papers in the following categories:

- Regular papers (limit 15 pages) on
- original scientific research results
- tools, their foundation and evaluations
- applications of formal methods, including rigourous evaluations

- Short papers (limit 8 pages) on
- any subject of interest in the area of formal methods that can be
described with sufficient detail within the page limit

Page limits include bibliography and any appendices. All submissions
must be original, unpublished, and not submitted for publication
elsewhere. Each paper will undergo a thorough review process.
Submissions will be judged on the basis of significance, relevance,
correctness, originality, and clarity.

Submissions should be made using the iFM 2018 Easychair site:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ifm2018

Submissions must be in PDF format, using the Springer LNCS style
files.

The conference proceedings will be published in Springer's
Lecture Notes in Computer Science series.

All accepted papers must be presented at the conference. Their authors
must be prepared to sign a copyright transfer statement. At least one
author of each accepted paper must register to the conference by the
early registration date, to be indicated by the organizers, and
present the paper.

=== Organization ===

= General chair =
Rosemary Monahan, Maynooth University, Ireland

= PC chairs =
Carlo A. Furia, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
Kirsten Winter, University of Queensland, Australia

= Program committee =
Erika Abraham, RWTH Aachen, Germany
Bernhard Aichernig, University of Graz, Austria
Elvira Albert, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain
Domenico Bianculli, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Eerke Boiten, De Montfort University, UK
Einar Broch Johnsen, University of Oslo, Norway
Maria Christakis, MPI-SWS, Germany
David Cok, GrammaTech, USA
Robert Colvin, University of Queensland, Australia
Ferruccio Damiani, University of Turin, Italy
Eva Darulova, MPI SWS, Germany
Frank de Boer, CWI Amsterdam, Netherlands
John Derrick, University of Sheffield, UK
Brijesh Dongol, Brunel University, UK
Catherine Dubois, ENSIIE, France
Diego Garbervetsky, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
Peter Hoefner, Data61, Australia
Marieke Huisman, University of Twente, Netherlands
Rajeev Joshi, NASA JPL, USA
Nikolai Kosmatov, CEA LIST, France
Laura Kovács, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Rustan Leino, Amazon, USA
Larissa Meinicke, University of Queensland, Australia
Dominique Mery, LORIA Nancy, France
Toby Murray, University of Melbourne, Australia
Luigia Petre, Åbo Akademi University, Finland
Ruzica Piskac, Yale University, USA
Chris Poskitt, SUTD, Singapore
Kostis Sagonas, Uppsala University, Sweden
Gerhard Schellhorn, Universitaet Augsburg, Germany
Steve Schneider, University of Surrey, UK
Gerardo Schneider, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Emil Sekerinski, McMaster University, Canada
Martin Steffen, University of Oslo, Norway
Helen Treharne, University of Surrey, UK
Caterina Urban, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Mark Utting, University of Sunshine Coast, Australia
Heike Wehrheim, University of Paderborn, Germany
Mitsuharu Yamamoto, Chiba University, Japan
Chenyi Zhang, Jinan University, China

= Publicity chair =
Hao Wu, Maynooth University, Ireland

=== Conference location ===

iFM 2018 is organized by Maynooth University and will take place in
Maynooth, Ireland.


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2018-02-19

[Caml-list] RuleML+RR 2018 SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

==================================================================

RuleML+RR 2018 SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

RuleML+RR 2018: International Joint Conference on Rules and Reasoning

http://2018.ruleml-rr.org

Part of Luxembourg Logic for AI Summit (LuxLogAI, https://luxlogai.uni.lu)

==================================================================

== SUMMARY ==

High-quality papers related to theoretical advances, novel technologies,
and innovative applications concerning knowledge representation and
reasoning with rules are solicited.

Important dates:
- Abstract: 20 Apr 2018
- Full paper: 27 Apr 2018

== THE CONFERENCE ==

The International Joint Conference on Rules and Reasoning (RuleML+RR) is
the leading international joint conference in the field of rule-based
reasoning. Stemming from the synergy between the well-known RuleML and RR
events, one of the main goals of this conference is to build bridges
between academia and industry.

RuleML+RR 2018 aims to bring together rigorous researchers and inventive
practitioners, interested in the foundations and applications of rules and
reasoning in academia, industry, engineering, business, finance, healthcare
and other application areas. It will provide a forum for stimulating
cooperation and cross-fertilization between the many different communities
focused on the research, development and applications of rule-based systems.

RuleML+RR 2018 will take place in Luxembourg on September 18th-21th 2018
and will be part of the Luxembourg Logic for AI Summit (LuxLogAI) "Methods
and Tools for Responsible AI", bringing together RuleML+RR 2018,
DecisionCAMP 2018, the Reasoning Web Summer School (RW 2018), and
the Global Conference on Artificial Intelligence (GCAI 2018).

== TOPICS ==

RuleML+RR welcomes original research from all areas of Rules and Reasoning.

Topics of particular interest include:

* Rule-based languages for intelligent information access and for the
semantic web
* Vocabularies, ontologies, and business rules
* Ontology-based data access
* Data management, and data interoperability for web data
* Distributed agent-based systems for the web
* Scalability and expressive power of logics for the semantic web
* Reasoning with incomplete, inconsistent and uncertain data
* Non-monotonic, common-sense, and closed-world reasoning for web data
* Non-classical logics and the Web
* Constraint programming
* Logic programming
* Production & business rules systems
* Streaming data and complex event processing
* Rules for machine learning, knowledge extraction and information retrieval
* Rule-based approaches to natural language processing
* Rule discovery, extraction and transformation
* Rules and ontology learning
* Deep Learning for rules and ontologies
* Neural Networks and logic rules
* Neural Networks and ontologies
* Rule-based approaches to agents
* Higher-order and modal rules
* Rules for knowledge graphs
* Pragmatic web reasoning and distributed rule inference / rule execution
* Big data reasoning with rules
* Rule markup languages and rule interchange formats
* Rule-based policies, reputation, and trust
* Scalability and expressive power of logics for rules
* System descriptions, applications and experiences
* Rules and human language technology
* Rules in online market research and online marketing
* Applications of rule technologies in healthcare and life sciences
* Applications of rule technologies in law, regulation and finance
* Industrial applications of rules
* Rules and social media
* Rules of ethics, laws, policies, and regulations

Particularly encouraged are submissions that combine one or several of the
above topics with the overall focus theme of the LuxLogAI Summit: Methods
and Tools for Responsible AI

== SUBMISSIONS ==

We accept the following submission formats for papers:

* Full papers (up to 15 pages in LNCS style)
* Technical Communications (up to 8 pages in LNCS style)

Submitted full papers should present original and significant research
results. They must not substantially overlap with papers that have been
published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a
conference/workshop with formal proceedings. Double submission to a
workshop with informal proceedings is allowed.

Technical communications are intended for promising but possibly
preliminary work, position papers, system descriptions, and applications
descriptions (which may be accompanied by a demo).

Submissions: via EasyChair (
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=rulemlrr2018)

The RuleML+RR 2018 best papers will be invited for rapid publication in the
Journal of Theory and Practice of Logic Programming (TPLP).

In addition to regular submissions, RuleML+RR 2018 will host an Industry
Track, a Doctoral Consortium and the 12th International Rule Challenge.

== PUBLICATION ==

The conference proceedings will be published by Springer in the Lecture
Notes in Computer Science series (LNCS).
All submissions must be prepared in Springer's LaTeX style LNCS (
http://www.springer.com/comp/lncs/authors.html).

== IMPORTANT DATES ==

Title and Abstract submission: 20 Apr 2018
Full papers submission: 27 Apr 2018
Notification of acceptance: 1 June 2018
Camera-ready submission: 15 June 2018
Conference: 18-21 Sept 2018

For each of these deadlines, a cut-off point of 23:59 AOE (anywhere on
earth) applies.

== ORGANISATION ==

Summit Chairs (LuxLogAI):
Leon van der Torre, Martin Theobald (U Luxembourg)
General Chair (RuleML+RR):
Xavier Parent (U Luxembourg)
Program Chairs:
Christoph Benzm??ller (U Luxembourg & FU Berlin)
Francesco Ricca (U Calabria)
Proceedings Chair:
Dumitru Roman (SINTEF/U Oslo)
Industry Track Chair:
Silvie Spreeuwenberg (LibRT Amsterdam)
Int'l Rule Challenge Chairs:
Giovanni De Gasperis (U L'Aquila)
Adrian Giurca (BTU Cottbus- Senftenberg)
Reasoning Web (RW) Summer School
Claudia d'Amato (U Bari)
Publicity Chairs:
Frank Olken (Frank Olken Consulting)
Amal Tawakuli (U Luxembourg)

== PROGRAM COMMITTEE ==

Full list available at: http://2018.ruleml-rr.org

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2018-02-16

[Caml-list] FLoC 2018 - Joint Call for Workshop Papers

FLoC 2018 — The 2018 Federated Logic Conference
6-19 July 2018
Oxford, England UK
http://www.floc2018.org/workshops

The seventh Federated Logic Conference (FLoC'18) will be held in
Oxford, UK, in July 2018, at the Mathematical Institute and the
Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford. In addition
to nine major international conferences related to mathematical logic
and computer science, FLoC 2018 will feature 79 workshops arranged
in three segments:

Pre-FLoC: Sat 7 - Sun 8 (workshops related to CSF, FSCD, ITP, LICS and SAT),
Mid-FLoC: Wed 11 - Sat 14 (workshops related to CAV, ICLP, IJCAR, ITP and LICS),
Post-FLoC: Wed 18 - Thu 19 (workshops related to FM, CAV, ICLP and IJCAR).

The suggested submission deadline is 15th April 2018, notifications
will be sent out no later than 15th May 2018. Please refer to the
individual websites for workshop-specific Calls for Papers, deadlines
and information on how to submit.


*** Pre-FLoC workshops (Saturday 7 - Sunday 8 July)

32nd International Workshop on Unification (UNIF 2018), 7 July
http://unif2018.cic.unb.br/

7th International Workshop on Confluence (IWC 2018), 7 July
http://cl-informatik.uibk.ac.at/events/iwc-2018/

7th International Workshop on Classical Logic and Computation (CL&C
2018), 7 July
http://www.di.unito.it/~stefano/CL&C/CL&C18.htm

Higher-Dimensional Rewriting and Algebra (HDRA 2018), 7 July
http://hdra.gforge.inria.fr/

International Workshop on Logical Frameworks and Meta-Languages:
Theory and Practice (LFMTP 2018), 7 July
http://lfmtp.org/workshops/2018/

7th International Workshop on the Cross-Fertilization Between CSP and
SAT (CSPSAT 2018), 7 July
(website coming soon)

Pragmatics of SAT (PoS 2018), 7 July
http://www.pragmaticsofsat.org/2018/

Twenty Years of Deep Inference (TYDI 2018), 7 July
https://www.lix.polytechnique.fr/~lutz/orgs/TYDI2018.html

10th International Workshop on Computing with Terms and Graphs
(TERMGRAPH 2018), 7 July
https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/maribel.fernandez/TERMGRAPH.html

Syntax and Semantics of Low-Level Languages (LOLA 2018), 7 July
https://cs.appstate.edu/~johannp/lola18/

9th Workshop on Higher Order Rewriting (HOR 2018), 7 July
https://lipn.univ-paris13.fr/HOR18/

2018 Joint Workshop on Linearity & TLLA (5th International Workshop on
Linearity and 2nd Workshop on Trends in Linear Logic and
Applications), 7-8 July
http://lipn.univ-paris13.fr/TLLALinearity18/

Workshop on Homotopy Type Theory and Univalent Foundations (HoTT/UF
2018), 7-8 July
https://hott-uf.github.io/2018/

Game Semantics 25, 7-8 July
http://www.gamesemantics.org/game-semantics-25

Workshop on Proof Complexity (PC 2018), 7-8 July
http://easychair.org/smart-program/PC2018/

Programming And Reasoning on Infinite Structures (PARIS 2018), 7-8 July
https://www.irif.fr/~saurin/RAPIDO/PARIS-2018/

6th Workshop on Strategic Reasoning (SR 2018), 7-8 July
http://projects.lsv.fr/sr18/

Workshop in honour of Dana Scott's 85th birthday and 50 years of
domain theory, 7-8 July
https://andrejbauer.github.io/domains-floc-2018/

5th Workshop on Natural Language and Computer Science (NLCS 2018), 7-8 July
http://www.indiana.edu/~iulg/nlcs.html

7th Workshop on Mathematically Structured Functional Programming (MSFP
2018), 8 July
https://msfp2018.bentnib.org/

5th International Workshop on Rewriting Techniques for Program
Transformations and Evaluation (WPTE 2018), 8 July
http://researchers.lille.inria.fr/niehren/WPTE-2018/main.html

The Coq Workshop 2018, 8 July
https://coqworkshop2018.inria.fr/

International Workshop on Quantified Boolean Formulas and Beyond (QBF
2018), 8 July
http://fmv.jku.at/qbf18/

5th International Workshop on Graphical Models for Security (GraMSec
2018), 8 July
http://gramsec.uni.lu/

Women in Logic 2018, 8 July
https://sites.google.com/site/womeninlogic2018/welcome

9th Workshop on Intersection Types and Related Systems (ITRS 2018), 8 July
https://www.irif.fr/~michele/itrs2018

Coalgebra Now, 8 July
http://homepage.tudelft.nl/c9d1n/floc2018coalgebra/index.html

12th International Workshop on Developments in Computational Models
(DCM 2018), 8 July
https://sites.google.com/g.uporto.pt/dcm18

IFIP Working Group 1.6: Rewriting, 8 July
http://cbr.uibk.ac.at/ifip-wg1.6/

Workshop on Foundations of Computer Security (FCS 2018), 8 July
http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/liminjia/events/fcs2018/

Mentor Workshop 1, 8 July
(website coming soon)


*** Mid-FLoC workshops (Wednesday 11 - Saturday 14 July)

Satisfiability Checking and Symbolic Computation: Bridging Two
Communities to Solve Real Problems (SC^2 2018), 11 July
http://www.sc-square.org/CSA/workshop3.html

IFAC Conference on Analysis and Design of Hybrid Systems (ADHS 2018), 11-13 July
http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/conferences/ADHS18/

16th International Workshop on Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT
2018), 12-13 July
http://smt-workshop.cs.uiowa.edu/2018/

CAV Tutorials, 13 July
http://cavconference.org/2018/invited-speakers-tutorials/

7th Workshop on Logic and Systems Biology (LSB), 13 July
http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/russell.harmer/lsb7.html

Isabelle Workshop, 13 July
http://sketis.net/isabelle/isabelle-workshop-2018

25th RCRA International Workshop on Experimental Evaluation of
Algorithms for Solving Problems with Combinatorial Explosion, 13 July
https://sites.google.com/a/aixia.it/rcra/rcra-2018

5th Workshop on Formal Reasoning in Distributed Algorithms (FRIDA 2018), 13 July
http://forsyte.at/events/frida2018/

5th Vampire Workshop (Vampire 2018), 13 July
http://easychair.org/smart-program/Vampire18/

19th Workshop on Logic and Computational Complexity (LCC), 13 July
http://www.cs.swansea.ac.uk/lcc/index.html

5th Workshop on Horn Clauses for Verification and Synthesis (HCVS 2018), 13 July
https://www.sci.unich.it/hcvs18/

Workshop on Learning and Automata (LearnAut 2018), 13 July
https://learnaut2018.wordpress.com/

1st International Workshop on Multi-objective Reasoning in
Verification and Synthesis (MoRe 2018), 13 July
http://math.umons.ac.be/more2018/

Workshop on Modular Knowledge (Tetrapod), 13 July
http://new.kwarc.info/events/Tetrapod-2018/

First Workshop on Automated Deduction for Separation Logics (ADSL 2018), 13 July
http://adsl.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr/

DMW18: Deduction Mentoring Workshop, 13 July
http://easychair.org/smart-program/DMW18/

Runtime Verification for Rigorous Systems Engineering (RV4RISE), 13 July
http://rv4rise.conf.tuwien.ac.at/

13th International Workshop on User Interfaces for Theorem Provers
(UITP 2018), 13 July
http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/uitp/uitp2018/

Verification Mentoring Workshop 2, 13 July
http://cavconference.org/2018/verification-mentoring-workshop/

Summit on Machine Learning Meets Formal Methods, sponsored by the Alan
Turing Institute, 13 July
http://www.floc2018.org/summit-on-machine-learning/

4th Workshop on Formal Integrated Development Environment (F-IDE 2018), 14 July
https://sites.google.com/view/fideworkshop2018

16th International Workshop on Quantitative Aspects of Programming
Languages and Systems (QAPL 2018), 14 July
http://www1.isti.cnr.it/~Massink/EVENTS/QAPL2018/

16th Overture Workshop: New Capabilities and Applications for
Model-based Systems Engineering, 14 July
http://overturetool.org/workshops/16th-Overture-Workshop.html

FM Doctoral Symposium, 14 July
http://www.fm2018.org/doctoral-symposium/


*** Post-FLoC workshops (Wednesday 18 - Thursday 19 July)

18th Refinement Workshop, 18 July
http://www.refinenet.org.uk/

1st International Workshop on Parallel Logical Reasoning (PLR), 18 July
https://antonwijs.wixsite.com/plr2018

7th Workshop on Synthesis (SYNT 2018), 18 July
http://synt2018.seas.ucla.edu

Theorem Prover Components for Educational Software (ThEdu 2018), 18 July
http://www.uc.pt/en/congressos/thedu/thedu18

TLA+ Community Event 2018, 18 July
http://tla2018.loria.fr/

Workshop on Answer Set Programming and Other Computing Paradigms
(ASPOCP 2018), 18 July
https://sites.google.com/site/aspocp2018/

International Conference on Logical Programming - Doctoral Consortium
(ICLP - DC 2018), 18 July
http://easychair.org/smart-program/ICLP-DC2018/

16th International Colloquium on Implementation of Constraint and
Logic Programming Systems (CICLOPS 2018), 18 July
https://people.cs.kuleuven.be/~tom.schrijvers/CICLOPS2018/

3rd International Workshop on Automated Reasoning in Quantified
Non-Classical Logics (ARQNL 2018), 18 July
http://iltp.de/ARQNL-2018/

Workshop on Logic and Practice of Programming (LPoP 2018), 18 July
http://lpop.cs.stonybrook.edu/

13th International Workshop on Constraint Based Methods in
Bioinformatics (WCB 2018), 18 July
http://clp.dimi.uniud.it/wcb/wcb18/

International Workshop on the Verification and Validation of
Autonomous Systems (VaVAS), 18-19 July
http://cgi.csc.liv.ac.uk/~michael/VaVAS-July2018/

16th International Workshop on Termination (WST 2018), 18-19 July
http://wst2018.webs.upv.es/

MLP18: Machine Learning for Programming, 18-19 July
https://prodo.ai/mlp18

The LaSh 2018 Workshop on Logic and Search, 18-19 July
http://www.logicandsearch.org/LaSh2018/

10th Working Conference on Verified Software: Theories, Tools and
Experiments (VSTTE 2018), 18-19 July
http://vstte18.it.uu.se/

11th International Workshop on Numerical Software Verification
(NSV-XI), 18-19 July
https://nsv-2018.github.io/nsv2018/

18th International Workshop on Automated Verification of Critical
Systems (AVOCS 2018), 18-19 July
http://avocs18.irisa.fr/

Logics for Reasoning about Preferences, Uncertainty, and Vagueness
(PRUV 2018), 19 July
http://pruv18.inf.unibz.it/

Third Workshop on Fun With Formal Methods (FWFM 2018), 19 July
http://persons.iis.nsk.su/en/FWFM2018

International Workshop on External and Internal Calculi for
Non-Classical Logics, 19 July
http://weic2018.loria.fr/

Robots, Morality, and Trust through the Verification Lens, 19 July
http://qav.cs.ox.ac.uk/robots_morality_trust/

6th Workshop on the Practical Aspects of Automated Reasoning (PAAR
2018), 19 July
http://easychair.org/smart-program/PAAR-2018/

Verification of Engineered Molecular Devices and Programs (VEMDP 2018), 19 July
http://dna.caltech.edu/vemdp2018/


Workshops Committee

General Chair: Moshe Y. Vardi
Co-chairs: Daniel Kroening, Marta Kwiatkowska
Workshops Chair: Gethin Norman
Workshops Deputy Chair: Christoph Haase
CAV: Hana Chockler
CSF: Cas Cremers
FM: Helen Treharne
FSCD: Paula Severi
ICLP: Stefan Woltran
IJCAR: Alberto Griggio
ITP: Assia Mahboubi
LICS: Patricia Bouyer
SAT: Martina Seidl

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[Caml-list] First Call for Papers: 11th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Software Language Engineering (SLE 2018)

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Papers:
11th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Software Language Engineering (SLE 2018)
co-located with SPLASH 2018 
November 5-6, 2018
Boston, Massachusetts, United States 
------------------------------------------------------------------------

We are pleased to invite you to submit papers to the 11th ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Software Language Engineering (SLE 2018), held in conjunction with SPLASH 2018 at Boston, Massachusetts on November 5-6, 2018.

---------------------------
Scope
---------------------------

With the ubiquity of computers, software has become the dominating intellectual asset of our time. In turn, this software depends on software languages, namely the languages it is written in, the languages used to describe its environment, and the languages driving its development process. Given that everything depends on software and that software depends on software languages, it seems fair to say that for many years to come, everything will depend on software languages.

Software language engineering (SLE) is the discipline of engineering languages and their tools required for the creation of software. It abstracts from the differences between programming languages, modelling languages, and other software languages, and emphasizes the engineering facet of the creation of such languages, that is, the establishment of the scientific methods and practices that enable the best results. While SLE is certainly driven by its metacircular character (software languages are engineered using software languages), SLE is not self-satisfying: its scope extends to the engineering of languages for all and everything.

Like its predecessors, the 11th edition of the SLE conference, SLE 2018, will bring together researchers from different areas united by their common interest in the creation, capture, and tooling of software languages. It overlaps with traditional conferences on the design and implementation of programming languages, model-driven engineering, and compiler construction, and emphasizes the fusion of their communities. To foster the latter, SLE traditionally fills a two-day program with a single track, with the only temporal overlap occurring between co-located events.

---------------------------
Topics of Interest
---------------------------

SLE 2018 solicits high-quality contributions in areas ranging from theoretical and conceptual contributions, to tools, techniques, and frameworks in the domain of software language engineering. Topics relevant to SLE cover generic aspects of software languages development rather than aspects of engineering a specific language. In particular, SLE is interested in contributions from the following areas:

* Software Language Design and Implementation
      - Approaches to and methods for language design
      - Static semantics (e.g., design rules, well-formedness constraints)
      - Techniques for specifying behavioral / executable semantics
      - Generative approaches (incl. code synthesis, compilation)
      - Meta-languages, meta-tools, language workbenches
* Software Language Validation
      - Verification and formal methods for languages
      - Testing techniques for languages
      - Simulation techniques for languages
* Software Language Integration and Composition
      - Coordination of heterogeneous languages and tools
      - Mappings between languages (incl. transformation languages)
      - Traceability between languages
      - Deployment of languages to different platforms
* Software Language Maintenance
      - Software language reuse
      - Language evolution
      - Language families and variability
* Domain-specific approaches for any aspects of SLE (design, implementation, validation, maintenance)
* Empirical evaluation and experience reports of language engineering tools
      - User studies evaluating usability
      - Performance benchmarks
      - Industrial applications

---------------------------
Important Dates
---------------------------

All dates are Anywhere on Earth.

* Fri 29 June 2018 -  Abstract Submission
* Fri 6 July 2018 - Paper Submission
* Fri 24 August 2018 - Author Notification
* Fri 31 August 2018 - Artifact Submission
* Fri 5 October 2018 - Camera Ready Deadline
* Wed 10 October 2018 - Artifact Notification
* Fri 12 October 2018 - Deadline for Artifact-Related Paper Updates
* Sun 4 Nov 2018 - SLE Workshops
* Mon 5 Nov - Tue 6 Nov 2018 - SLE Conference

---------------------------
Types of Submissions
---------------------------

* Research papers
These should report a substantial research contribution to SLE or successful application of SLE techniques or both. Full paper submissions must not exceed 12 pages excluding bibliography.

* Tool papers
Because of SLE's interest in tools, we seek papers that present software tools related to the field of SLE. Selection criteria include originality of the tool, its innovative aspects, and relevance to SLE. Any of the SLE topics of interest are appropriate areas for tool demonstrations. Submissions must provide a tool description of 4 pages excluding bibliography, and a demonstration outline including screenshots of up to 6 pages. Tool demonstrations must have the keywords "Tool Demo" or "Tool Demonstration" in the title. The 4-page tool description will, if the demonstration is accepted, be published in the proceedings. The 6-page demonstration outline will be used by the program committee only for evaluating the submission.

* New ideas / vision papers
New ideas papers should describe new, non-conventional SLE research approaches that depart from standard practice. They are intended to describe well-defined research ideas that are at an early stage of investigation. Vision papers are intended to present new unifying theories about existing SLE research that can lead to the development of new technologies or approaches. New ideas / vision papers must not exceed 4 pages excluding bibliography.

Workshops: Workshops will be organized by SPLASH. Please inform us and contact the SPLASH organizers if you would like to organize a workshop of interest to the SLE audience. Information on how to submit workshops can be found at the SPLASH 2018 Website: https://conf.researchr.org/track/splash-2018/splash-2018-Workshops.

---------------------------
Artifact Evaluation
---------------------------

For the third year SLE will use an evaluation process for assessing the quality of the artifacts on which papers are based to foster the culture of experimental reproducibility. Authors of accepted papers are invited to submit artifacts. More information will be announced on the Website.

---------------------------
Submission
---------------------------

Submissions have to use the ACM SIGPLAN Conference Format "acmart" (http://sigplan.org/Resources/Author/#acmart-format); please make sure that you always use the latest ACM SIGPLAN acmart LaTeX template (https://www.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/consolidated-tex-template/acmart-master.zip), and that the document class definition is \documentclass[sigplan,screen]{acmart}. Do not make any changes to this format!

Using the Word template is strongly discouraged.

Ensure that your submission is legible when printed on a black and white printer. In particular, please check that colors remain distinct and font sizes in figures and tables are legible.

SLE follows a single-blind review process. Thus, you do not have to blind your submission.

All submissions must be in PDF format.

Concurrent Submissions:
Papers must describe unpublished work that is not currently submitted for publication elsewhere as described by SIGPLAN's Republication Policy (http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Republication). Submitters should also be aware of ACM's Policy and Procedures on Plagiarism (http://www.acm.org/publications/policies/plagiarism_policy). Submissions that violate these policies will be desk-rejected.

Submission Site:
Submissions will be accepted at https://sle18.hotcrp.com/.

---------------------------
Reviewing Process
---------------------------

All submitted papers will be reviewed by at least three members of the program committee.  Research papers and tool papers will be evaluated concerning novelty, correctness, significance, readability, and alignment with the conference call. New ideas / vision papers will be evaluated primarily concerning novelty, significance, readability, and alignment with the conference call.

For fairness reasons, all submitted papers must conform to the above instructions. Submissions that violate these instructions may be rejected without review, at the discretion of the PC chairs.

---------------------------
Awards
---------------------------

* Distinguished paper: Award for most notable paper, as determined by the PC chairs based on the recommendations of the programme committee.

* Distinguished reviewer: Award for distinguished reviewer, as determined by the PC chairs.

* Distinguished artifact: Award for the artifact most significantly exceeding expectations, as determined by the AEC chairs based on the recommendations of the artifact evaluation committee.

---------------------------
Publication
---------------------------

All accepted papers will be published in the ACM Digital Library.

AUTHORS TAKE NOTE: 
The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of the conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.

---------------------------
Program Committee
---------------------------

Andrew Black, Portland State University, USA
Erwan Bousse, TU Wien, Austria
Marco Brambilla, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Ruth Breu, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Walter Cazzola, University of Milan, Italy
Marsha Chechik, University of Toronto, Canada
Tony Clark, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Juan de Lara, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
Thomas Degueule, CWI Amsterdam, Netherlands
Juergen Dingel, Queen's University, Canada
Tom Dinkelaker, Ericsson, Germany
Sebastian Erdweg, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Bernd Fischer, Stellenbosch University, South Africa
Esther Guerra, Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain
Daco Harkes, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Robert Hirschfeld, University of Potsdam, Germany
Michael Homer, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Dimitris Kolovos, University of York, UK
Ralf Lämmel, University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany
Marjan Mernik, University of Maribor, Slovenia
Gunter Mussbacher, McGill University, Canada
James Noble, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Bruno Oliveira, University of Hong Kong, China
Christoph Reichenbach, Lund University, Sweden
Jan Oliver Ringert, University of Leicester, UK
Bernhard Rumpe, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Anthony Sloane, Macquarie University, Australia
Emma Söderberg, Google, Denmark
Mark van den Brand, TU Eindhoven, Netherlands
Tijs van der Storm, CWI Amsterdam, Netherlands
Eelco Visser, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Eric Walkingshaw, Oregon State University, USA
Andreas Wortmann, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Vadim Zaytsev, Rain Code, Belgium

---------------------------
Contact
---------------------------

For additional information, clarification, or answers to questions, please contact the organizers by email: sle2018@googlegroups.com.

2018-02-06

[Caml-list] FMCAD 2018 - Call for Papers

International Conference on
Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design (FMCAD)
Austin, Texas, October 30 - November 2, 2018

http://www.fmcad.org/FMCAD18

# IMPORTANT DATES

Abstract Submission: May 11, 2018
Paper Submission: May 18, 2018
Author Notification: July 18, 2018
Camera-Ready Version: Aug 19, 2018

All deadlines are 11:59 pm AoE (Anywhere on Earth)

FMCAD Tutorial Day: Oct 30, 2018
Regular Program: Oct 31 - Nov 2, 2018

Part of the FMCAD 2018 program:

FMCAD Student Forum

# CONFERENCE SCOPE AND PUBLICATION

FMCAD 2018 is the eighteenth in a series of conferences on the theory
and applications of formal methods in hardware and system
verification. FMCAD provides a leading forum to researchers in
academia and industry for presenting and discussing groundbreaking
methods, technologies, theoretical results, and tools for reasoning
formally about computing systems. FMCAD covers formal aspects of
computer-aided system design including verification, specification,
synthesis, and testing.

FMCAD employs a rigorous peer-review process. Accepted papers are
distributed through both ACM and IEEE digital libraries. In addition,
published articles are made available freely on the conference page;
the authors retain the copyright. There are no publication fees. At
least one of the authors is required to register for the conference
and present the accepted paper. A small number of outstanding FMCAD
submissions will be considered for inclusion in a Special Issue of the
journal on Formal Methods in System Design (FMSD).

# TOPICS OF INTEREST

FMCAD welcomes submission of papers reporting original research on
advances in all aspects of formal methods and their applications to
computer- aided design. Topics of interest include (but are not
limited to):

* Model checking, theorem proving, equivalence checking, abstraction
and reduction, compositional methods, decision procedures at the
bit- and word-level, probabilistic methods, combinations of
deductive methods and decision procedures.

* Synthesis and compilation for computer system descriptions,
modeling, specification, and implementation languages, formal
semantics of languages and their subsets, model-based design, design
derivation and transformation, correct-by-construction methods.

* Application of formal and semi-formal methods to functional and
non-functional specification and validation of hardware and
software, including timing and power modeling, verification of
computing systems on all levels of abstraction, system-level design
and verification for embedded systems, cyber-physical systems,
automotive systems and other safety-critical systems,
hardware-software co-design and verification, and transaction-level
verification.

* 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 to verifying safety, connectivity and
security properties of networks, distributed systems, smart
contracts, block chains, and IoT devices.

# SUBMISSIONS

Submissions must be made electronically in PDF format via EasyChair:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fmcad18

Two categories of papers are invited: Regular papers, and Tool & Case
Study papers. Regular papers are expected to offer novel foundational
ideas, theoretical results, or algorithmic improvements to existing
methods, along with experimental impact validation where
applicable. Tool & Case Study papers are expected to report on the
design, implementation or use of verification (or related) technology
in a practically relevant context (which need not be industrial), and
its impact on design processes.

Both Regular and Tool & Case study papers must use the IEEE
Transactions format on letter-size paper with a 10-point font
size. Regular papers can be up to 8 pages in length and tool papers up
to 4 pages, although there is no requirement to fill all pages in
either category. Authors will be required to select the appropriate
paper category at abstract submission time. Submissions may contain an
optional appendix, which will not appear in the final version of the
paper. The reviewers should be able to assess the quality and the
relevance of the results in the paper without reading the appendix.

Submissions in both categories must contain original research that has
not been previously published, nor is concurrently submitted for
publication. Any partial overlap with published or concurrently
submitted papers must be clearly indicated. If experimental results
are reported, authors are strongly encouraged to provide the reviewers
access to their data at submission time, so that results can be
independently verified.

# FMCAD 2017 COMMITTEES

## PROGRAM CHAIRS:

Nikolaj Bjorner, Microsoft
Arie Gurfinkel, University of Waterloo

## PC

Jade Alglave University College London
June Andronick CSIRO|Data61 and UNSW
Armin Biere Johannes Kepler University Linz
Per Bjesse Synopsys Inc.
Roderick Bloem Graz University of Technology
Gianpiero Cabodi Politechnico Torino
Supratik Chakraborty IIT Bombay
Sylvain Conchon Universite Paris-Sud
Bruno Dutertre SRI international
Alberto Griggio University of Trento
Liana Hadarean Synopsys
Fei He Tsinghua University
Joe Hendrix University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Warren Hunt The University of Texas at Austin
Alexander Ivrii IBM
Dejan Jovanovic SRI International
Temesghen Kahsai NASA Ames / CMU
George Karpenkov VERIMAG
Igor Konnov Vienna University of Technology
Ken McMillan Microsoft
Alexander Nadel Intel
Giles Reger The University of Manchester
Leonid Ryzhyk VMware Research
Martina Seidl Johannes Kepler University Linz
Natasha Sharygina Universite della Svizzera italiana (USI Lugano, Switzerland)
Sharon Shoham Tel Aviv University
Anna Slobodova Centaur
Mathias Soeken Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Christoph Sticksel The MathWorks
Niklas Sörensson Chalmer University of Technology
Murali Talupur FormalSim
Yakir Vizel Princeton University
Georg Weissenbacher Vienna University of Technology
Jaco van de Pol University of Twente



## STUDENT FORUM CHAIR:

Dejan Ivanovic, SRI International

## WEBMASTER:

Tom van Dijik, Johannes Kepler University

## PUBLICATION CHAIR:

Jade Alglave, University College London and Microsoft

## PUBLICITY CHAIR:

Yakir Vizel, Technion

## FMCAD STEERING COMMITTEE

Armin Biere, Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria
Alan Hu, University of British Columbia, Canada
Warren Hunt, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Vigyan Singhal, Oski Tech

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2018-02-05

[Caml-list] Second Call for Papers: PACMPL issue ICFP 2018

PACMPL Volume 2, Issue ICFP 2018
Call for Papers

accepted papers to be invited for presentation at
The 23rd ACM SIGPLAN International Conference on Functional Programming
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
http://icfp18.sigplan.org/

### Important dates

Submissions due: 16 March 2018 (Friday) Anywhere on Earth
https://icfp18.hotcrp.com
Author response: 2 May (Wednesday) - 4 May (Friday) 14:00 UTC
Notification: 18 May (Friday)
Final copy due: 22 June (Friday)
Conference: 24 September (Monday) - 26 September (Wednesday)

### About PACMPL

Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages (PACMPL <https://pacmpl.acm.org/>) is a Gold Open Access journal publishing research on all aspects of programming languages, from design to implementation and from mathematical formalisms to empirical studies. Each issue of the journal is devoted to a particular subject area within programming languages and will be announced through publicized Calls for Papers, like this one.

### Scope

[PACMPL](https://pacmpl.acm.org/) issue ICFP 2018 seeks original papers on the art and science of functional programming. Submissions are invited on all topics from principles to practice, from foundations to features, and from abstraction to application. The scope includes all languages that encourage functional programming, including both purely applicative and imperative languages, as well as languages with objects, concurrency, or parallelism. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

* *Language Design*: concurrency, parallelism, and distribution; modules; components and composition; metaprogramming; type systems; interoperability; domain-specific languages; and relations to imperative, object-oriented, or logic programming.

* *Implementation*: abstract machines; virtual machines; interpretation; compilation; compile-time and run-time optimization; garbage collection and memory management; multi-threading; exploiting parallel hardware; interfaces to foreign functions, services, components, or low-level machine resources.

* *Software-Development Techniques*: algorithms and data structures; design patterns; specification; verification; validation; proof assistants; debugging; testing; tracing; profiling.

* *Foundations*: formal semantics; lambda calculus; rewriting; type theory; monads; continuations; control; state; effects; program verification; dependent types.

* *Analysis and Transformation*: control-flow; data-flow; abstract interpretation; partial evaluation; program calculation.

* *Applications*: symbolic computing; formal-methods tools; artificial intelligence; systems programming; distributed-systems and web programming; hardware design; databases; XML processing; scientific and numerical computing; graphical user interfaces; multimedia and 3D graphics programming; scripting; system administration; security.

* *Education*: teaching introductory programming; parallel programming; mathematical proof; algebra.

Submissions will be evaluated according to their relevance, correctness, significance, originality, and clarity. Each submission should explain its contributions in both general and technical terms, clearly identifying what has been accomplished, explaining why it is significant, and comparing it with previous work. The technical content should be accessible to a broad audience.

PACMPL issue ICFP 2018 also welcomes submissions in two separate categories &mdash; Functional Pearls and Experience Reports &mdash; that must be marked as such at the time of submission and that need not report original research results. Detailed guidelines on both categories are given at the end of this call.

Please contact the principal editor if you have questions or are concerned about the appropriateness of a topic.

### Preparation of submissions

**Deadline**: The deadline for submissions is Friday, March 16, 2018, Anywhere on Earth (<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anywhere_on_Earth>). This deadline will be strictly enforced.

**Formatting**: Submissions must be in PDF format, printable in black and white on US Letter sized paper, and interpretable by common PDF tools. All submissions must adhere to the "ACM Small" template that is available (in both LaTeX and Word formats) from <https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/submissions>. For authors using LaTeX, a lighter-weight package, including only the essential files, is available from <http://sigplan.org/Resources/Author/#acmart-format>.

There is a limit of 27 pages for a full paper or 14 pages for an Experience Report; in either case, the bibliography will not be counted against these limits. These page limits have been chosen to allow essentially the same amount of content with the new single-column format as was possible with the two-column format used in past ICFP conferences. Submissions that exceed the page limits or, for other reasons, do not meet the requirements for formatting, will be summarily rejected.

See also PACMPL's Information and Guidelines for Authors at <https://pacmpl.acm.org/authors.cfm>.

**Submission**: Submissions will be accepted at <https://icfp18.hotcrp.com/>

Improved versions of a paper may be submitted at any point before the submission deadline using the same web interface.

**Author Response Period**: Authors will have a 72-hour period, starting at 14:00 UTC on Wednesday, May 2, 2018, to read reviews and respond to them.

**Supplementary Materials**: Authors have the option to attach supplementary material to a submission, on the understanding that reviewers may choose not to look at it. The material should be uploaded at submission time, as a single pdf or a tarball, not via a URL. This supplementary material may or may not be anonymized; if not anonymized, it will only be revealed to reviewers after they have submitted their review of the paper and learned the identity of the author(s).

**Authorship Policies**: All submissions are expected to comply with the ACM Policies for Authorship that are detailed at <https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/information-for-authors>.

**Republication Policies**: Each submission must adhere to SIGPLAN's republication policy, as explained on the web at <http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Republication>.

**Resubmitted Papers**: Authors who submit a revised version of a paper that has previously been rejected by another conference have the option to attach an annotated copy of the reviews of their previous submission(s), explaining how they have addressed these previous reviews in the present submission. If a reviewer identifies him/herself as a reviewer of this previous submission and wishes to see how his/her comments have been addressed, the principal editor will communicate to this reviewer the annotated copy of his/her previous review. Otherwise, no reviewer will read the annotated copies of the previous reviews.

### Review Process

This section outlines the two-stage process with lightweight double-blind reviewing that will be used to select papers for PACMPL issue ICFP 2018. We anticipate that there will be a need to clarify and expand on this process, and we will maintain a list of frequently asked questions and answers on the conference website to address common concerns.

**PACMPL issue ICFP 2018 will employ a two-stage review process.** The first stage in the review process will assess submitted papers using the criteria stated above and will allow for feedback and input on initial reviews through the author response period mentioned previously. At the review meeting, a set of papers will be conditionally accepted and all other papers will be rejected. Authors will be notified of these decisions on May 18, 2018.

Authors of conditionally accepted papers will be provided with committee reviews (just as in previous conferences) along with a set of mandatory revisions. After five weeks (June 22, 2018), the authors will provide a second submission. The second and final reviewing phase assesses whether the mandatory revisions have been adequately addressed by the authors and thereby determines the final accept/reject status of the paper. The intent and expectation is that the mandatory revisions can be addressed within five weeks and hence that conditionally accepted papers will in general be accepted in the second phase.

The second submission should clearly identify how the mandatory revisions were addressed. To that end, the second submission must be accompanied by a cover letter mapping each mandatory revision request to specific parts of the paper. The cover letter will facilitate a quick second review, allowing for confirmation of final acceptance within two weeks. Conversely, the absence of a cover letter will be grounds for the paper's rejection.

**PACMPL issue ICFP 2018 will employ a lightweight double-blind reviewing process.** To facilitate this, submitted papers must adhere to two rules:

1. **author names and institutions must be omitted**, and
2. **references to authors' own related work should be in the third person** (e.g., not "We build on our previous work ..." but rather "We build on the work of ...").

The purpose of this process is to help the reviewers come to an initial judgement about the paper without bias, not to make it impossible for them to discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult (e.g., important background references should not be omitted or anonymized). In addition, authors should feel free to disseminate their ideas or draft versions of their paper as they normally would. For instance, authors may post drafts of their papers on the web or give talks on their research ideas.

### Information for Authors of Accepted Papers

* As a condition of acceptance, final versions of all papers must adhere to the new ACM Small format. The page limits for final versions of papers will be increased to ensure that authors have space to respond to reviewer comments and mandatory revisions.

* Authors of accepted submissions will be required to agree to one of the three ACM licensing options: open access on payment of a fee (**recommended**, and SIGPLAN can cover the cost as described next); copyright transfer to ACM; or retaining copyright but granting ACM exclusive publication rights. Further information about ACM author rights is available from <http://authors.acm.org>.

* PACMPL is a Gold Open Access journal. It will be archived in ACM's Digital Library, but no membership or fee is required for access. Gold Open Access has been made possible by generous funding through ACM SIGPLAN, which will cover all open access costs in the event authors cannot. Authors who can cover the costs may do so by paying an Article Processing Charge (APC). PACMPL, SIGPLAN, and ACM Headquarters are committed to exploring routes to making Gold Open Access publication both affordable and sustainable.

* ACM offers authors a range of copyright options, one of which is Creative Commons CC-BY publication; this is the option recommended by the PACMPL editorial board. A reasoned argument in favour of this option can be found in the article [Why CC-BY?](https://oaspa.org/why-cc-by/) published by OASPA, the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association.

* We intend that the papers will be freely available for download from the ACM Digital Library in perpetuity via the OpenTOC mechanism.

* ACM Author-Izer is a unique service that enables ACM authors to generate and post links on either their home page or institutional repository for visitors to download the definitive version of their articles from the ACM Digital Library at no charge. Downloads through Author-Izer links are captured in official ACM statistics, improving the accuracy of usage and impact measurements. Consistently linking to the definitive version of an ACM article should reduce user confusion over article versioning. After an article has been published and assigned to the appropriate ACM Author Profile pages, authors should visit <http://www.acm.org/publications/acm-author-izer-service> to learn how to create links for free downloads from the ACM DL.

* At least one author of each accepted submissions will be expected to attend and present their paper at the conference. The schedule for presentations will be determined and shared with authors after the full program has been selected. Presentations will be videotaped and released online if the presenter consents.

* The official publication date is the date the papers are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to *two weeks prior* to the first day of the conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.

### Artifact Evaluation

Authors of papers that are conditionally accepted in the first phase of the review process will be encouraged (but not required) to submit supporting materials for Artifact Evaluation. These items will then be reviewed by an Artifact Evaluation Committee, separate from the paper Review Committee, whose task is to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the associated paper. Papers that go through the Artifact Evaluation process successfully will receive a seal of approval printed on the papers themselves. Authors of accepted papers will be encouraged to make the supporting materials publicly available upon publication of the papers, for example, by including them as "source materials" in the ACM Digital Library. An additional seal will mark papers whose artifacts are made available, as outlined in the ACM guidelines for artifact badging.

Participation in Artifact Evaluation is voluntary and will not influence the final decision regarding paper acceptance.

Further information about the motivations and expectations for Artifact Evaluation can be found at <https://icfp18.sigplan.org/track/icfp-2018-Artifacts>.

### Special categories of papers

In addition to research papers, PACMPL issue ICFP solicits two kinds of papers that do not require original research contributions: Functional Pearls, which are full papers, and Experience Reports, which are limited to half the length of a full paper. Authors submitting such papers should consider the following guidelines.

#### Functional Pearls

A Functional Pearl is an elegant essay about something related to functional programming. Examples include, but are not limited to:

* a new and thought-provoking way of looking at an old idea

* an instructive example of program calculation or proof

* a nifty presentation of an old or new data structure

* an interesting application of functional programming techniques

* a novel use or exposition of functional programming in the classroom

While pearls often demonstrate an idea through the development of a short program, there is no requirement or expectation that they do so. Thus, they encompass the notions of theoretical and educational pearls.

Functional Pearls are valued as highly and judged as rigorously as ordinary papers, but using somewhat different criteria. In particular, a pearl is not required to report original research, but, it should be concise, instructive, and entertaining. A pearl is likely to be rejected if its readers get bored, if the material gets too complicated, if too much specialized knowledge is needed, or if the writing is inelegant. The key to writing a good pearl is polishing.

A submission that is intended to be treated as a pearl must be marked as such on the submission web page, and should contain the words "Functional Pearl" somewhere in its title or subtitle. These steps will alert reviewers to use the appropriate evaluation criteria. Pearls will be combined with ordinary papers, however, for the purpose of computing the conference's acceptance rate.

#### Experience Reports

The purpose of an Experience Report is to help create a body of published, refereed, citable evidence that functional programming really works &mdash; or to describe what obstacles prevent it from working.

Possible topics for an Experience Report include, but are not limited to:

* insights gained from real-world projects using functional programming

* comparison of functional programming with conventional programming in the context of an industrial project or a university curriculum

* project-management, business, or legal issues encountered when using functional programming in a real-world project

* curricular issues encountered when using functional programming in education

* real-world constraints that created special challenges for an implementation of a functional language or for functional programming in general

An Experience Report is distinguished from a normal PACMPL issue ICFP paper by its title, by its length, and by the criteria used to evaluate it.

* Both in the papers and in any citations, the title of each accepted Experience Report must begin with the words "Experience Report" followed by a colon. The acceptance rate for Experience Reports will be computed and reported separately from the rate for ordinary papers.

* Experience Report submissions can be at most 12 pages long, excluding bibliography.

* Each accepted Experience Report will be presented at the conference, but depending on the number of Experience Reports and regular papers accepted, authors of Experience reports may be asked to give shorter talks.

* Because the purpose of Experience Reports is to enable our community to accumulate a body of evidence about the efficacy of functional programming, an acceptable Experience Report need not add to the body of knowledge of the functional-programming community by presenting novel results or conclusions. It is sufficient if the Report states a clear thesis and provides supporting evidence. The thesis must be relevant to ICFP, but it need not be novel.

The review committee will accept or reject Experience Reports based on whether they judge the evidence to be convincing. Anecdotal evidence will be acceptable provided it is well argued and the author explains what efforts were made to gather as much evidence as possible. Typically, more convincing evidence is obtained from papers which show how functional programming was used than from papers which only say that functional programming was used. The most convincing evidence often includes comparisons of situations before and after the introduction or discontinuation of functional programming. Evidence drawn from a single person's experience may be sufficient, but more weight will be given to evidence drawn from the experience of groups of people.

An Experience Report should be short and to the point: it should make a claim about how well functional programming worked on a particular project and why, and produce evidence to substantiate this claim. If functional programming worked in this case in the same ways it has worked for others, the paper need only summarize the results &mdash; the main part of the paper should discuss how well it worked and in what context. Most readers will not want to know all the details of the project and its implementation, but the paper should characterize the project and its context well enough so that readers can judge to what degree this experience is relevant to their own projects. The paper should take care to highlight any unusual aspects of the project. Specifics about the project are more valuable than generalities about functional programming; for example, it is more valuable to say that the team delivered its software a month ahead of schedule than it is to say that functional programming made the team more productive.

If the paper not only describes experience but also presents new technical results, or if the experience refutes cherished beliefs of the functional-programming community, it may be better off submitted it as a full paper, which will be judged by the usual criteria of novelty, originality, and relevance. The principal editor will be happy to advise on any concerns about which category to submit to.


### ICFP Organizers

General Chair: Robby Findler (Northwestern University, USA)

Artifact Evaluation Co-Chairs: Simon Marlow (Facebook, UK)
Ryan R. Newton (Indiana University, USA)
Industrial Relations Chair: Alan Jeffrey (Mozilla Research, USA)
Programming Contest Organiser: Matthew Fluet (Rochester Institute of Technology, USA)
Publicity and Web Chair: Lindsey Kuper (Intel Labs, USA)
Student Research Competition Chair: Ilya Sergey (University College London, UK)
Video Co-Chairs: Jose Calderon (Galois, Inc., USA)
Nicolas Wu (University of Bristol, UK)
Workshops Co-Chair: David Christiansen (Indiana University, USA)
Christophe Scholliers (Universiteit Gent, Belgium)


### PACMPL Volume 2, Issue ICFP 2018

Principal Editor: Matthew Flatt (Univesity of Utah, USA)

Review Committee:

Sandrine Blazy (IRISA, University of Rennes 1, France)
David Christiansen (Indiana University, USA)
Martin Elsman (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Marco Gaboardi (University at Buffalo, CUNY, USA)
Sam Lindley (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Heather Miller (Northweastern University, USA / EPFL, Switzerland)
J. Garrett Morris (University of Kansas, USA)
Henrik Nilsson (University of Nottingham, UK)
François Pottier (Inria, France)
Alejandro Russo (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)
Ilya Sergey (University College London, UK)
Michael Sperber (Active Group GmbH, Germany)
Wouter Swierstra (Utrecht University, UK)
Éric Tanter (University of Chile, Chile)
Katsuhiro Ueno (Tohoku University, Japan)
Niki Vazou (University of Maryland, USA)
Jeremy Yallop (University of Cambridge, UK)

External Review Committee:

Michael D. Adams (University of Utah, USA)
Amal Ahmed (Northeastern University, USA)
Nada Amin (University of Cambridge, USA)
Zena Ariola (University of Oregon)
Lars Bergstrom (Mozilla Research)
Lars Birkedal (Aarhus University, Denmark)
Edwin Brady ( University of St. Andrews, UK)
William Byrd (University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA)
Giuseppe Castagna (CRNS / University of Paris Diderot, France)
Sheng Chen (University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA)
Koen Claessen (Chalmers University ot Technology, Sweden)
Ugo Dal Lago (University of Bologna, Italy / Inria, France)
David Darais (University of Vermont, USA)
Joshua Dunfield (Queen's University, Canada)
Richard Eisenberg (Bryn Mawr College, USA)
Matthew Fluet (Rochester Institute of Technology, USA)
Nate Foster (Cornell University, USA)
Jurriaan Hage (Utrecht University, Netherlands)
David Van Horn (University of Maryland, USA)
Zhenjiang Hu (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
Suresh Jagannathan (Purdue University, USA)
Simon Peyton Jones (Microsoft Research, UK)
Naoki Kobayashi (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Neelakantan Krishnaswami (University of Cambridge, UK)
Kazutaka Matsuda (Tohoku University, Japan)
Trevor McDonell (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Hernan Melgratti (University of Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Akimasa Morihata (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Aleksandar Nanevski (IMDEA Software Institute, Spain)
Kim Nguyễn (University of Paris-Sud, France)
Cosmin Oancea (DIKU, University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Bruno C. d. S. Oliveira (University of Hong Kong, China)
Tomas Petricek (University of Cambridge, UK)
Benjamin Pierce (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Christine Rizkallah (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Tom Schrijvers (KU Leuven, Belgium)
Manuel Serrano (Inria, France)
Jeremy Siek (Indiana University, USA)
Josef Svenningsson (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)
Nicolas Tabareau (Inria, France)
Dimitrios Vytiniotis (Microsoft Research, UK)
Philip Wadler (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Meng Wang (University of Kent, UK)

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