2019-05-30
[Caml-list] [CICM] Call for Participation - 2nd Workshop on Formal Verification of Physical Systems (FVPS 2019)
2019-05-29
[Caml-list] Call for Participation - Workshop on Large Mathematical Libraries (LML 2019)
Workshop on Large Mathematics Libraries (LML 2019)
12th Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
- CICM 2019 -
July 8-12, 2019
CIIRC, Prague, Czech Republic
http://www.cicm-conference.org/2019
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Large formal and semiformal mathematics libraries are needed to
support mathematics research, mathematics education, rigorous software
development, and formal proof development. This workshop will explore
methods for designing, constructing, and maintaining large mathematics
libraries as well as for finding, comparing, and applying the
knowledge residing in these libraries.
Key topics of interest will include:
o Methods for sharing knowledge between libraries.
o Modular techniques for organizing the knowledge within libraries.
o The translation of libraries to different languages and logics.
o The construction of new libraries by integrating existing
libraries.
o Tools for exploring the contents of large libraries.
o Observations about past results.
The workshop will consist of two invited presentations and several
contributed presentations and system demonstrations. We welcome
presentation and demonstration proposals in the form of extended 1-4
page abstracts formatted in LaTeX. Abstracts should be sent via email
to wmfarmer@mcmaster.ca and dennis.mueller@fau.de. Abstracts of
selected presentations and demonstrations will be published online.
More details about LML 2019 are available at
https://www.cicm-conference.org/2019/cicm.php?event=lml&menu=general
Important Dates
o Abstract submission: June 24, 2019
o Notification: July 01, 2019
o Workshop: July 10, 2019
Registration
Registration to CICM 2019 and the workshops is open at the CICM
website or directly at
https://www.cicm-conference.org/2019/cicm.php?event=&menu=registration
--
Dennis M. Müller
"To do mathematics is to be, at once, touched by fire and bound by reason. This is no contradiction. Logic forms a narrow channel through which intuition flows with vastly augmented force"
- Jordan Ellenberg (How Not to Be Wrong)
[Caml-list] Call for papers: 10th Workshop on Tools for Automatic Program Analysis (TAPAS 2019)
online version: https://easychair.org/cfp/tapas2019
------------------------------------------------------------
10th Workshop on Tools for Automatic Program Analysis (TAPAS 2019)
8 October 2019, Porto, Portugal.Objectives
In recent years, a wide range of static analysis tools have emerged, some of which are currently in industrial use or are well beyond the advanced prototype level. Many impressive practical results have been obtained, which allow complex properties to be proven or checked in a fully or semi-automatic way, even in the context of complex software developments. In parallel, the techniques to design and implement static analysis tools have improved significantly, and much effort is being put into engineering the tools.
This workshop is intended to promote discussions and exchange experience between users of static analysis tools and specialists in all areas of program analysis design and implementation.
Scope
The technical program of TAPAS 2019 will consist of invited lectures, together with presentations based on submitted papers or abstracts.
Submissions can cover any aspect of program analysis tools including, but not limited to the following:
- design and implementation of static analysis tools (including practical techniques used for obtaining precision and performance)
- components of static analysis tools (front-ends, abstract domains, etc.)
- integration of static analyzers (in proof assistants, test generation tools, IDEs, etc.)
- reusable software infrastructure (analysis algorithms and frameworks)
- experience reports on the use of static analyzers (both research prototypes and industrial tools)
This workshop welcomes work in progress, overviews of more extensive work, programmatic or position papers and tool presentations.
Submission Guidelines
TAPAS 2019 welcomes the following categories of submissions:
- Regular papers (12-15+ pages)
- Short papers (6-8+ pages)
- Extended abstracts (2 pages)
Please use the LNCS style, and submit via the TAPAS 2019 author interface of EasyChair.
Publication
Revised versions of selected papers will be published after the workshop by Springer in a volume of its Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS), which will collect contributions to some workshops and symposia co-located with FM 2019.
The workshop will also have informal proceedings, posted on its web page.
Important Dates
- Submission deadline: 4 July 2019
- Notification of acceptance: 2 August
- Final version due: 31 August
- Workshop: 8 October
- Post-proceedings due: 15 November (tentative)
Program Committee
- David Delmas, Airbus and Sorbonne Université, France (chair)
- Fausto Spoto, Università di Verona, Italy
- Caterina Urban, Inria, France
- Franck Vedrine, CEA LIST, France
- Jules Villard, Facebook, UK
- Jingling Xue, University of New South Wales, Australia
- Tomofumi Yuki, Inria, France
- Sarah Zennou, Airbus, France
2019-05-27
[Caml-list] Call for papers for IFL 2019 (Implementation and Application of Functional Languages)
Please, find below the call for papers for IFL 2019.
Please forward these to anyone you think may be interested.
Apologies for any duplicates you may receive.
best regards,
Jurriaan Hage
Publicity Chair of IFL
IFL 2019
31st Symposium on Implementation and Application of Functional Languages
National University of Singapore
September 25th-27th, 2019
http://2019.iflconference.org
================================================================================
### Scope
The goal of the IFL symposia is to bring together researchers actively engaged
in the implementation and application of functional and function-based
programming languages. IFL 2019 will be a venue for researchers to present and
discuss new ideas and concepts, work in progress, and publication-ripe results
related to the implementation and application of functional languages and
function-based programming.
Topics of interest to IFL include, but are not limited to:
- language concepts
- type systems, type checking, type inferencing
- compilation techniques
- staged compilation
- run-time function specialization
- run-time code generation
- partial evaluation
- (abstract) interpretation
- metaprogramming
- generic programming
- automatic program generation
- array processing
- concurrent/parallel programming
- concurrent/parallel program execution
- embedded systems
- web applications
- (embedded) domain specific languages
- security
- novel memory management techniques
- run-time profiling performance measurements
- debugging and tracing
- virtual/abstract machine architectures
- validation, verification of functional programs
- tools and programming techniques
- (industrial) applications
### Keynote Speaker
* Olivier Danvy, Yale-NUS College
### Submissions and peer-review
Differently from previous editions of IFL, IFL 2019 solicits two kinds of
submissions:
* Regular papers (12 pages including references)
* Draft papers for presentations ('weak' limit between 8 and 15 pages)
Regular papers will undergo a rigorous review by the program committee, and will
be evaluated according to their correctness, novelty, originality, relevance,
significance, and clarity. A set of regular papers will be conditionally
accepted for publication. Authors of conditionally accepted papers will be
provided with committee reviews along with a set of mandatory revisions.
Regular papers not accepted for publication will be considered as draft
papers, at the request of the author.
Draft papers will be screened to make sure that they are within the scope of
IFL, and will be accepted for presentation or rejected accordingly.
Prior to the symposium:
Authors of conditionally accepted papers and accepted presentations will
submit a pre-proceedings version of their work that will appear in the draft
proceedings distributed at the symposium. The draft proceedings does not
constitute a formal publication.
We require that at least one of the authors present the work at IFL 2019.
After the symposium:
Authors of conditionally accepted papers will submit a revised versions of
their paper for the formal post-proceedings.
The program committee will assess whether the mandatory revisions have been
adequately addressed by the authors and thereby determines the final
accept/reject status of the paper.
Our interest is to ultimately accept all conditionally accepted papers. If you
are an author of a conditionally accepted paper, please make sure that you
address all the concerns of the reviewers.
Authors of accepted presentations will be given the opportunity to incorporate
the feedback from discussions at the symposium and will be invited to submit a
revised full article for the formal post-proceedings.
The program committee will evaluate these submissions according to their
correctness, novelty, originality, relevance, significance, and clarity, and
will thereby determine whether the paper is accepted or rejected.
### Publication
The formal proceedings will appear in the International Conference
Proceedings Series of the ACM Digital Library.
At no time may work submitted to IFL be simultaneously submitted to other
venues; submissions must adhere to ACM SIGPLAN's republication policy:
http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Policies/Republication
### Important dates
Submission of regular papers: May 31, 2019
Submission of draft papers: July 15, 2019
Regular and draft papers notification: August 1, 2019
Deadline for early registration: August 15, 2019
Submission of pre-proceedings version: September 15, 2019
IFL Symposium: September 25-27, 2019
Submission of papers for post-proceedings: November 30, 2019
Notification of acceptance: January 31, 2020
Camera-ready version: February 29, 2020
### Submission details
All contributions must be written in English. Papers must use the ACM two
columns conference format, which can be found at:
http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template
Authors submit through EasyChair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ifl2019
### Peter Landin Prize
The Peter Landin Prize is awarded to the best paper presented at the
symposium every year. The honored article is selected by the program committee
based on the submissions received for the formal review process. The prize
carries a cash award equivalent to 150 Euros.
### Organization and Program committee
Chairs: Jurrien Stutterheim (Standard Chartered Bank Singapore), Wei Ngan Chin (National University of Singapore)
Program Committee:
- Olaf Chitil, University of Kent
- Clemens Grelck, University of Amsterdam
- Daisuke Kimura, Toho University
- Pieter Koopman, Radboud University
- Tamas Kozsik, Eotvos Lorand University
- Roman Leschinskiy, Facebook
- Ben Lippmeier, The University of New South Wales
- Marco T. Morazan, Seton Hall University
- Sven-Bodo Scholz, Heriot-Watt University
- Tom Schrijvers, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
- Alejandro Serrano, Utrecht University
- Tony Sloane, Macquarie University
- Simon Thompson, University of Kent
- Marcos Viera, Universidad de la Republica
- Wei Ngan Chin, NUS
- Jurrien Stutterheim, Standard Chartered Bank
### Venue
The 31st IFL is organized by the National University of Singapore.
Singapore is located in the heart of South-East Asia, and the city itself is extremely well connected by trains and taxis.
See the website for more information on the venue.
### Acknowledgments
This call-for-papers is an adaptation and evolution of content from previous
instances of IFL. We are grateful to prior organizers for their work, which
is reused here.
A part of IFL 2019 format and CFP language that describes conditionally
accepted papers has been adapted from call-for-papers of OOPSLA conferences.
2019-05-26
[Caml-list] CIFMA 2019 - Call for Papers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Call for Papers ============ CIFMA 2019 ============ =================================================================================== 1st International Workshop on Cognition: Interdisciplinary Foundations, Models and Applications =================================================================================== https://cifma.github.io Oslo, Norway, 17 September 2019 Co-located with SEFM 2019 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Submission link https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cifma2019 Submission deadline: Thursday 13 June 2019 Notification: Friday 4 July 2019 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cognition encompasses many aspects of intellectual functions and processes such as attention, knowledge, memory, judgment, reasoning, problem solving, decision making, comprehension and production of language. Although it originated from the field of psychology, it goes beyond the individual human mind and behaviour, and involves and affects the interaction with the environment in which humans act. The increasing complexity of the environment with which humans interact is no longer restricted to their natural living environment and the other humans populating it, but includes a large technological support consisting of physical and computational systems, virtual worlds and robots. This fact has expanded the scope of studying cognition to a large number of disciplines well beyond psychology. Cognitive processes are analysed from different perspectives within different contexts, notably in the fields of linguistics, anesthesia, neuroscience, psychiatry, psychology, education, philosophy, anthropology, linguistics, biology, systemics, logic, and computer science. These and other different approaches to the analysis of cognition are synthesised in the developing field of cognitive science, a progressively autonomous academic discipline. The objectives of this new international workshop are: 1. to bring together practitioners and researchers from academia, industry and research institutions who are interested in the foundations and applications of cognition from the perspective of their areas of expertise and aim at a synergistic effort in integrating approaches from different areas; 2. to nurture cooperation among researchers from different areas and establish concrete collaborations; 3. to present formal methods to cognitive scientists as a general modelling and analysis approach, whose effectiveness goes well beyond its application to computer science and software engineering. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBMISSION GUIDELINES ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Authors are invited to submit, via Easychair, research contributions or experience reports. The submission link is: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cifma2019 All papers should be written in English and prepared using the specific LNCS templates available at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. There are six categories of submissions RESEARCH PAPERS to present original research and the analysis, interpretation and validation of the research findings. POSITION PAPERS to present innovative, arguable ideas, opinions or frameworks which are likely to foster discussion at the workshop. INTERDISCIPLINARY PROJECT PAPERS to describe a new interdisciplinary research project, or the status of an ongoing project or the outcomes of a recently completed project. CASES STUDY PAPERS to report on case studies, preferably in a real-world setting. TOOL PAPERS to present a new tool, a new tool component or novel extensions to an existing tool. TOOL DEMONSTRATION PAPERS to demonstrate the tool workflow(s) and human interaction aspects, and evaluate the overall role of the tool and impact to cognitive science. Contributions will be in the form of * FULL PAPERS between 12 and 15 pages for submission (and between 12 and 16 pages for post-proceedings camera-ready). * SHORT PAPERS between 6 and 8 pages for submission (and between 6 and 9 pages for post-proceedings camera-ready). * PRESENTATIONS extended abstract up to 4 pages, which will be included in the pre-proceeding but not published in the post-proceedings. "Short papers" and "Presentations" can discuss new ideas which are at an early stage of development and which have not yet been thoroughly evaluated. The program committee may reject papers that are outside these lengths on the grounds of length alone. Submitted papers will be refereed for quality, correctness, originality and relevance. Notification and reviews will be communicated via email. Accepted papers (both "Full papers" and "Short papers") will be included in the workshop programme and will appear in the workshop pre-proceedings as well as in the LNCS post-proceedings. Pre-proceedings will be available online before the Workshop. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIST OF TOPICS ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Contributions to the workshop cover the areas of education, research and tecHnology, either in general or with a focus on formal methods. Topics are organised in possibly overlapping categories and include, but are not restricted to: INTERDISCIPLINARY FOUNDATIONS OF COGNITION * philosophy of cognition; * human memory and memory processes; * attention; * perception, visual cognition and situated cognition; * cognitive models and architectures; * languages for cognitive science; * social cognition. COGNITIVE ROBOTICS * autonomous knowledge acquisition; * motor babbling; * learning by imitation; * cognitive architectures for robotics. COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS * cognitive approaches to grammar; * cognitive and conceptual semantics; * conceptual organisation; * cognitive phonology; * dynamical models of language acquisition; * computational models of metaphor and language acquisition. COGNITIVE LEARNING * learning theories; * cognitive development; * problem solving; * metacognition. COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE AND MEDICINE * biomedical signal and image processing; * biomedical sensors and wearable systems; * brain-computer interfaces and neural prostheses; * brain mapping; * neural and rehabilitation engineering. LOGICS and their application to * human-computer interaction; * human behaviour; * human reasoning and problem solving; * visual reasoning; * human-robot interaction; * linguistics. SOFTWARE ENGINEERING and FORMAL METHODS * integration of cognitive models and cognitive architectures within the software design and verification process; * cognitive aspects in cyber-physical systems and their verification; * socio-technical systems; * cognitive aspects in safety analysis and verification of safety-critical systems; * cognitive security; * cognition hacking; * formal frameworks for trust reasoning; * formal methods for the modeling and analysis of robotic systems; * formal methods for the modeling and analysis of human behaviour; * formal methods for the modeling and analysis of human interaction with computers and robots; * application of formal methods to cognitive psychology. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Antonio Cerone, Department of Computer Science, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan * Alan Dix, Computational Foundry, Swansea University, UK ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PROGRAM COMMITTEE ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Oana Andrei, School of Computing Science, University of Glascow, UK * Luca Andrighetto, Department of Education Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy * Giovanna Broccia, Institute for Information Science and Technologies (CNT-ISTI), Italy * Ana Cavalcanti, Department of Computer Science, University of York, UK * Antonio Cerone, Department of Computer Science, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan (Co-chair) * Peter Chapman, School of Computing, Edinburgh Napier University, UK * Anke Dittmar, Institute of Computer Science, Rostock University, Germany * Alan Dix, Computational Foundry, Swansea University, UK (Co-chair) * Filippo Domaneschi, Department of Education Sciences, University of Genoa, Italy * Siamac Fazli, Department of Computer Science, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan * Andrey Filchenko, Department of Languages, Linguistics and Literatures, Nazarbayev University, * Kazakhstan * Roberta Gori, Department of Computer Science, University of Pisa, Italy * Guido Governatori, Data61, CSIRO, Australia * Pierluigi Graziani, Department of Pure and Applied Science, University of Urbino, Italy * Per Ola Kristensson, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, UK * Karl Lermer, Safety Critical Systems Research Lab, ZHAW, Switzerland * Kathy L. Malone, Graduate School of Education, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan * Paolo Masci, US National Institute of Aerospace (NIA), US * Mieke Massink, Institute of Information Science and Technologies (CNR-ISTI), Italy * Paolo Milazzo, Department of Computer Science, University of Pisa, Italy * Marcello Passarelli, Institute for Educational Technologies (CNT-ITD), Italy * Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen, Department of History, Philosophy and Religious Studies, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan * Peter Ölveczky, Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway * Ka I Pun, Department of Computing, Mathematics and Physics, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway * Anara Sandygulova, Department of Robotics and Mechatronics, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan * Volker Stolz, Department of Computing, Mathematics and Physics, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway * Jim Tørresen, Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PUBLICATION ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Accepted regular and short papers will be published after the Workshop by Springer in a volume of Lecture Notes in Computer Science (http://www.springer.com/lncs), which will collect contributions to some workshops co-located with SEFM 2019. Condition for inclusion in the post-proceedings is that at least one of the co-authors has presented the paper at the Workshop. One or more journal special issue(s) with selected papers may be planned, depending on the number and quality of submissions. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CONTACT ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All inquiries concerning submissions should be sent to cifma2019@easychair.org
2019-05-24
[Caml-list] Call for Papers - 2nd PhD Workshop on Cyber-Physical Systems
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2nd PhD Workshop on Cyber-Physical Systems
Porto Conte Ricerche - Alghero - Sardinia - Italy
September 23, 2019
http://www.cpsschool.eu/cps-workshop/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The PhD Workshop on Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) is an initiative of the
CPS Summer School community to offer participants a close contact with
leading experts on the field, as well as the opportunity to present and
discuss their ideas in a dynamic and friendly setting. We invite PhD
students to submit papers describing their research on any of the topics
of interest of the school.
Topics of Interest
Models, methods, tools, and architectures for CPS
Testing, modelling, and validation of CPS
Verification and formal methods for CPS
Intelligent methods and algorithms for CPS
Reactive and real-time systems
Reconfigurable and self-aware systems
On-line monitoring and management of CPS
Security, trust and dependability of CPS
Examples of CPS applications
Submission
The submissions should contain a description of the problem being
addressed, your motivation for addressing the problem, proposed plan of
research, the progress to date (what you have already achieved and what
remains to be done), and related work. The accepted papers will be
presented during the evening on the September 23th to an interested
audience and will be discussed with a panel of senior researchers from
academia and the industry. Participants will present their work with
brief oral presentations and poster session. Papers are expected to be
6-10 pages (excluding references), written in English following the LNCS
format and submitted electronically in PDF format via EasyChair
(https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cpsws19).
Important deadlines
Submission by 21 June 2019
Notification by 28 June 2019
Camera-ready by 5 July 2019
Proceedings
Accepted papers will be published online as part of CEUR- WS
Proceedings, which are broadly indexed, e.g., by SCOPUS and listed in
standard bibliographic databases such as DBLP. N.B. Papers accepted will
only be included in the published Proceedings under the condition that
at least one author attend the workshop to present it.
Fees
Workshop only: 30 € for PhD student, and 50 € for others.
Workshop Chair
Luca Pulina, University of Sassari
--
--
*Dona il 5x1000* all'Università degli Studi di Sassaricodice fiscale:
00196350904
[Caml-list] Call for Participation - CPS Summer School 2019
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPS Summer School 2019
Designing Cyber-Physical Systems – From concepts to implementation
Porto Conte Ricerche - Alghero - Sardinia - Italy
September 23-27, 2019
http://www.cpsschool.eu
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cyber-physical systems (CPS) are complex and autonomous ensembles of
different components that interact to offer smart and adaptive
functionalities. These systems are increasingly used in a variety of
applications with a growing market, potentially bringing about
significant social benefits. However, there is no such thing as a free
lunch, and there area several new challenges and trade-offs to face when
designing CPS, especially since they should be able to adapt to the
changing environments, or heal themselves. Uncertain operation
environments and interactions with humans as users and/or as operators
complicate the scenarios of these ever increasingly pervasive systems.
The CPS summer school is targeted at students, research scientists, and
R&D experts from academia and industry, who want to learn about CPS
engineering and applications. The program is composed of both lectures
and practical sessions, covering all the design phases of CPS (i.e.,
from concept to the definition of the final system and the discussion of
the key challenges).
Topics (http://www.cpsschool.eu/program/) include, but are not limited
to, the following:
- Market trends for CPS
- Hardware/software and multi-view modelling
- Adaptivity
- Low power design of heterogeneous systems
- Tools for dataflow design, high-level synthesis, hardware/software
co-design, and coarse/fine reconfiguration
Application and Registration (http://www.cpsschool.eu/application/)
The school is open to up to 40 participants.
Application deadline: June 10, 2019. Notification deadline: June 15, 2019.
Confirmed Speakers (http://www.cpsschool.eu/confirmed-speakers/) include
the following lecturers:
- Davide Ariu, PluribusOne, Cagliari (Italy)
- Luca Carloni - Columbia University, New York City (USA)
- Luigia Carlucci Aiello, La Sapienza University, Rome (Italy)
- Jeronimo Castrillon, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden (Germany)
- Nuria de Lama, Vice-Secretary General (BDVA) and European Programs
Manager (Atos)
- Nikil Dutt - University of California, Irvine (USA)
- Giovanni Pruneddu - University of Sassari, Sassari (Italy)
- Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli - University of California, Berkeley (USA)
- Armando Tacchella - University of Genova, Genova (Italy)
Organization
Francesca Palumbo, Università degli Studi di Sassari (ITA) [School
Director, fpalumbo@uniss.it]
Christian Pilato, Politecnico di Milano (ITA)
Luca Pulina, Università degli Studi di Sassari (ITA)
Carlo Sau, Università degli Studi di Cagliari (ITA)
--
--
*Dona il 5x1000* all'Università degli Studi di Sassaricodice fiscale:
00196350904
2019-05-21
[Caml-list] [TFP'19 and TFPIE'19] call for participation
C A L L F O R P A R T I C I P A T I O N
---------------------------------
====== TFP 2019 ======
20th Symposium on Trends in Functional Programming
12-14 June, 2019
Vancouver, BC, CA
https://www.tfp2019.org/index.html
====== TFPIE 2019 ======
8th International Workshop on Trends in Functional Programming in
Education
11 June, 2019
Vancouver, BC, CA
http://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~hage0101/tfpie2019/index.html
The symposium on Trends in Functional Programming (TFP) is an
international forum for
researchers with interests in all aspects of functional programming,
taking a broad
view of current and future trends in the area. It aspires to be a lively
environment
for presenting the latest research results, and other contributions (see
below at scope).
Please be aware that TFP uses two distinct rounds of submissions (see
below at submission
details).
TFP 2019 will be the main event of a pair of functional programming
events. TFP 2019
will be accompanied by the International Workshop on Trends in
Functional Programming
in Education (TFPIE), which will take place on June 11.
== Invited Speakers ==
TFP 2019 is pleased to announce keynote talks by the following two
invited speakers:
Nikhil Swamy, Microsoft Research: Structuring the Verification of
Imperative Programs with
Functional Programming
Frank Wood, University of British Columbia: Probabilistic Programming
TFPIE 2019 is pleased to have the following invited speaker:
Gregor Kiczales: Functional Programming at the Core of a High Throughput
Software
Engineering Curriculum
== Scope ==
The symposium recognizes that new trends may arise through various
routes. As part of
the Symposium's focus on trends we therefore identify the following five
article
categories. High-quality articles are solicited in any of these categories:
Research Articles:
Leading-edge, previously unpublished research work
Position Articles:
On what new trends should or should not be
Project Articles:
Descriptions of recently started new projects
Evaluation Articles:
What lessons can be drawn from a finished project
Overview Articles:
Summarizing work with respect to a trendy subject
Articles must be original and not simultaneously submitted for
publication to any
other forum. They may consider any aspect of functional programming:
theoretical,
implementation-oriented, or experience-oriented. Applications of
functional programming
techniques to other languages are also within the scope of the symposium.
Topics suitable for the symposium include, but are not limited to:
Functional programming and multicore/manycore computing
Functional programming in the cloud
High performance functional computing
Extra-functional (behavioural) properties of functional programs
Dependently typed functional programming
Validation and verification of functional programs
Debugging and profiling for functional languages
Functional programming in different application areas:
security, mobility, telecommunications applications, embedded
systems, global computing, grids, etc.
Interoperability with imperative programming languages
Novel memory management techniques
Program analysis and transformation techniques
Empirical performance studies
Abstract/virtual machines and compilers for functional languages
(Embedded) domain specific languages
New implementation strategies
Any new emerging trend in the functional programming area
If you are in doubt on whether your article is within the scope of TFP,
please contact
the TFP 2019 program chairs, William J. Bowman and Ron Garcia.
== Best Paper Awards ==
To reward excellent contributions, TFP awards a prize for the best paper
accepted for
the formal proceedings.
TFP traditionally pays special attention to research students,
acknowledging that
students are almost by definition part of new subject trends. A student
paper is one
for which the authors state that the paper is mainly the work of
students, the students
are listed as first authors, and a student would present the paper. A
prize for the
best student paper is awarded each year.
In both cases, it is the PC of TFP that awards the prize. In case the
best paper happens
to be a student paper, that paper will then receive both prizes.
== Instructions to Author ==
Papers must be submitted at:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tfp2019
Authors of papers have the choice of having their contributions formally
reviewed either
before or after the Symposium.
== Pre-symposium formal review ==
Papers to be formally reviewed before the symposium should be submitted
before an early
deadline and receive their reviews and notification of acceptance for
both presentation
and publication before the symposium. A paper that has been rejected in
this process may
still be accepted for presentation at the symposium, but will not be
considered for the
post-symposium formal review.
== Post-symposium formal review ==
Papers submitted for post-symposium review (draft papers) will receive
minimal reviews and
notification of acceptance for presentation at the symposium. Authors of
draft papers will
be invited to submit revised papers based on the feedback received at
the symposium. A
post-symposium refereeing process will then select a subset of these
articles for formal
publication.
== Paper categories ==
There are two types of submission, each of which can be submitted either
for pre-symposium
or post-symposium review:
Extended abstracts. Extended abstracts are 4 to 10 pages in length.
Full papers. Full papers are up to 20 pages in length.
Each submission also belongs to a category:
research
position
project
evaluation
overview paper
Each submission should clearly indicate to which category it belongs.
Additionally, a draft paper submission—of either type (extended abstract
or full paper) and
any category—can be considered a student paper. A student paper is one
for which primary
authors are research students and the majority of the work described was
carried out by the
students. The submission should indicate that it is a student paper.
Student papers will receive additional feedback from the PC shortly
after the symposium has
taken place and before the post-symposium submission deadline. Feedback
is only provided for
accepted student papers, i.e., papers submitted for presentation and
post-symposium formal
review that are accepted for presentation. If a student paper is
rejected for presentation,
then it receives no further feedback and cannot be submitted for
post-symposium review.
== Format ==
Papers must be written in English, and written using the LNCS style. For
more information
about formatting please consult the Springer LNCS web site
(http://www.springer.com/lncs).
== Program Committee ==
Program Co-chairs
William J. Bowman University of British Columbia
Ronald Garcia University of British Columbia
Matteo Cimini University of Massachusetts Lowell
Ryan Culpepper Czech Technical Institute
Joshua Dunfield Queen's University
Sam Lindley University of Edinburgh
Assia Mahboubi INRIA Nantes
Christine Rizkallah University of New South Wales
Satnam Singh Google AI
Marco T. Morazán Seton Hall University
John Hughes Chalmers University and Quviq
Nicolas Wu University of Bristol
Tom Schrijvers KU Leuven
Scott Smith Johns Hopkins University
Stephanie Balzer Carnegie Mellon University
Viktória Zsók Eötvös Loránd University
[Caml-list] ENTROPY 2019: Call for Participation - Co-located with EuroS&P'19
Call for participation — ENTROPY 2019
ENabling TRust through Os Proofs … and beYond
16 June 2019
Second International workshop on the use of theorem provers for
modelling and verification at the hardware-software interface
https://entropy2019.sciencesconf.org
Co-located with EuroS&P'19, KTH, Stockholm, June 2019
***************************************************************
PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Formal Proof of a Secure OS Full Trusted Computing Base
by Dominique Bolignano, Prove & Run
Time protection: principled prevention of timing channels
by Gernot Heiser, University of New South Wales
Proving the security of interrupt handling against interrupt-based side-channel attacks: a case study
by Frank Piessens, KU Leuven
Nailing Down the Architectural Abstraction
by Peter Sewell, University of Cambridge
2019-05-14
[Caml-list] Second Call for Papers, Demos, and Performances: 7th ACM SIGPLAN International Workshop on Functional Art, Music, Modeling and Design. Berlin, Germany, August 23rd, 2019.
Second Call for Papers, Demos, and Performances: 7th ACM SIGPLAN International Workshop on Functional Art, Music, Modeling and Design. Berlin, Germany, August 23rd, 2019.
Key Dates
=========
Paper submission deadline: May 27 (extended deadline)
Author Notification: June 17
Camera Ready: June 30
FARM 2019 website : http://functional-art.org/2019/
Submission types
=========
Research papers (papers track): 5-12 pages*
Demo proposal (papers track): extended abstract 500-2000 words
Performances (performance track)
*Please note: some earlier CFPs that were sent out had a typo
in the page count for research papers. The correct length is 5-12.
Please see website for more details on each type of submission.
About FARM
=========
The ACM SIGPLAN International Workshop on Functional Art, Music,
Modelling and Design (FARM) gathers together people who are harnessing
functional techniques in the pursuit of creativity and expression. It
is co-located with ICFP 2019, the 24th ACM SIGPLAN International
Conference on Functional Programming.
Functional Programming has emerged as a mainstream software
development paradigm, and its artistic and creative use is booming. A
growing number of software toolkits, frameworks and environments for
art, music and design now employ functional programming languages and
techniques. FARM is a forum for exploration and critical evaluation of
these developments, for example to consider potential benefits of
greater consistency, tersity, and closer mapping to a problem domain.
FARM encourages submissions from across art, craft and design,
including textiles, visual art, music, 3D sculpture, animation, GUIs,
video games, 3D printing and architectural models, choreography,
poetry, and even VLSI layouts, GPU configurations, or mechanical
engineering designs. Theoretical foundations, language design,
implementation issues, and applications in industry or the arts are
all within the scope of the workshop. The language used need not be
purely functional ("mostly functional" is fine), and may be manifested
as a domain specific language or tool. Moreover, submissions focusing
on questions or issues about the use of functional programming are
within the scope.
Finances
=========
If you would have financial difficulty attending, you can apply for
conference "PAC" funds. Please get in touch for more information.
Questions
=========
If you have any questions about what type of contributions that might
be suitable, or anything else regarding submission or the workshop
itself, please contact the organizers.
All presentations at FARM 2019 will be recorded. Permission to publish
the resulting video (in all probability on YouTube, along with the
videos of ICFP itself and the other ICFP-co-located events) will be
requested on-site.
[Caml-list] [Final Call for Papers] Formal Techniques for Dependable Autonomous Systems (FT4DAS-2019)
2019-05-09
[Caml-list] CICM 2019: Joint Call for Workshop Papers (OpenMath, LML, GVMM, FVPS), Doctoral Programme Submissions & Participation
Workshops Papers (OpenMath, LML, GVMM, FVPS)
Doctoral Programme Submissions
Participation
12th Conference on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
- CICM 2019 -
July 8-12, 2019
CIIRC, Prague, Czech Republic
http://www.cicm-conference.org/2019
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digital and computational solutions are becoming the prevalent means for the
generation, communication, processing, storage and curation of mathematical
information.
CICM brings together the many separate communities that have developed
theoretical and practical solutions for mathematical applications such as
computation, deduction, knowledge management, and user interfaces. It offers a
venue for discussing problems and solutions in each of these areas and their
integration.
In addition to the main tracks, CICM 2019 will host the Exploring the Mizar
Library tutorial and 4 workshops: Formal Mathematics for Mathematicians (FMM),
Formal Verification of Physical Systems (FVPS), Large Mathematical Libraries
(LML), 30th OpenMath Workshop.
This is a call for submissions and participation to the
- 30th OpenMath Workshop
- Large Mathematics Libraries Workshop (LML 2019)
- 4th workshop on Formal Mathematics for Mathematicians (FVMM 2019)
- 2nd Workshop on Formal Verification of Physical Systems (FVPS 2019)
- CICM doctoral programm track
More details about workshops and the doctoral programm are available from their
webpages on the CICM website
https://www.cicm-conference.org/2019
* Submissions Deadlines *
- OpenMath 2019 continuous until July 1, 2019
- LML 2019 May 13, 2019
- FVMM 2019 May 13, 2019
- FVPS 2019 May 24, 2019
- CICM doctoral programm track May 15, 2019
* Registration *
Registration to CICM 2019 and the workshops is open at the CICM website or
directly at
https://www.cicm-conference.org/2019/cicm.php?event=&menu=registration
2019-05-08
[Caml-list] [TFPIE'19] Final call for papers: Trends in Functional Programming in Education 2019, 11 June 2019, Vancouver, BC, CA
TFPIE 2019 Call for papers http://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~hage0101/tfpie2019/index.html (June 11th, University of British Columbia, Vancouver Canada, co-located with TFP 2019) TFPIE 2019 welcomes submissions describing techniques used in the classroom, tools used in and/or developed for the classroom and any creative use of functional programming (FP) to aid education in or outside Computer Science. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: FP and beginning CS students FP and Computational Thinking FP and Artificial Intelligence FP in Robotics FP and Music Advanced FP for undergraduates FP in graduate education Engaging students in research using FP FP in Programming Languages FP in the high school curriculum FP as a stepping stone to other CS topics FP and Philosophy The pedagogy of teaching FP FP and e-learning: MOOCs, automated assessment etc. Best Lectures - more details below In addition to papers, we are requesting best lecture presentations. What's your best lecture topic in an FP related course? Do you have a fun way to present FP concepts to novices or perhaps an especially interesting presentation of a difficult topic? In either case, please consider sharing it. Best lecture topics will be selected for presentation based on a short abstract describing the lecture and its interest to TFPIE attendees. The length of the presentation should be comparable to that of a paper. On top of the lecture itself, the presentation can also provide commentary on the lecture. Submissions Potential presenters are invited to submit an extended abstract (4-6 pages) or a draft paper (up to 16 pages) in EPTCS style. The authors of accepted presentations will have their preprints and their slides made available on the workshop's website. Papers and abstracts can be submitted via easychair at the following link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tfpie2019 After the workshop, presenters will be invited to submit (a revised version of) their article for review. The PC will select the best articles that will be published in the Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science (EPTCS). Articles rejected for presentation and extended abstracts will not be formally reviewed by the PC. Dates Submission deadline: May 14th 2019, Anywhere on Earth. Notification: May 20th Workshop: June 11th Submission for formal review: August 18th 2019, Anywhere on Earth Notification of full article: October 6th Camera ready: November 1st Program Committee Alex Gerdes - University of Gothenburg / Chalmers Jurriaan Hage (Chair) - Utrecht University Pieter Koopman - Radboud University, the Netherlands Elena Machkasova - University of Minnesota, Morris, USA Heather Miller - Carnegie Mellon University and EPFL Lausanne Prabhakar Ragde - University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada Simon Thompson - University of Kent, UK Sharon Tuttle - Humboldt State University, Arcata, USA Note: information on TFP is available at https://www.tfp2019.org/index.html
[Caml-list] [TFP'19] final call for papers (deadline extension): Trends in Functional Programming 2019, 12-14 June 2019, Vancouver, BC, CA
-------------------------------- F I N A L C A L L F O R P A P E R S -------------------------------- ====== TFP 2019 ====== 20th Symposium on Trends in Functional Programming 12-14 June, 2019 Vancouver, BC, CA https://www.tfp2019.org/index.html == Important Dates == Sumbission Deadline for Draft Papers Thursday, May 16, 2019 ** extended deadline ** Notification for Draft Papers Tuesday, May 21, 2019 ** extended deadline ** TFPIE Tuesday, June 11, 2019 Symposium Wednesday, June 12, 2019 – Friday, June 14, 2019 Notification of Student Paper Feedback Friday June 21, 2019 Submission Deadline for revised Draft Papers (post-symposium formal review) Thursday, August 1, 2019 Notification for post-symposium submissions Thursday, October 24, 2019 Camera Ready Deadline (both pre- and post-symposium) Friday, November 29, 2019 The symposium on Trends in Functional Programming (TFP) is an international forum for researchers with interests in all aspects of functional programming, taking a broad view of current and future trends in the area. It aspires to be a lively environment for presenting the latest research results, and other contributions (see below at scope). Please be aware that TFP uses two distinct rounds of submissions (see below at submission details). TFP 2019 will be the main event of a pair of functional programming events. TFP 2019 will be accompanied by the International Workshop on Trends in Functional Programming in Education (TFPIE), which will take place on June 11. == Scope == The symposium recognizes that new trends may arise through various routes. As part of the Symposium's focus on trends we therefore identify the following five article categories. High-quality articles are solicited in any of these categories: Research Articles: Leading-edge, previously unpublished research work Position Articles: On what new trends should or should not be Project Articles: Descriptions of recently started new projects Evaluation Articles: What lessons can be drawn from a finished project Overview Articles: Summarizing work with respect to a trendy subject Articles must be original and not simultaneously submitted for publication to any other forum. They may consider any aspect of functional programming: theoretical, implementation-oriented, or experience-oriented. Applications of functional programming techniques to other languages are also within the scope of the symposium. Topics suitable for the symposium include, but are not limited to: Functional programming and multicore/manycore computing Functional programming in the cloud High performance functional computing Extra-functional (behavioural) properties of functional programs Dependently typed functional programming Validation and verification of functional programs Debugging and profiling for functional languages Functional programming in different application areas: security, mobility, telecommunications applications, embedded systems, global computing, grids, etc. Interoperability with imperative programming languages Novel memory management techniques Program analysis and transformation techniques Empirical performance studies Abstract/virtual machines and compilers for functional languages (Embedded) domain specific languages New implementation strategies Any new emerging trend in the functional programming area If you are in doubt on whether your article is within the scope of TFP, please contact the TFP 2019 program chairs, William J. Bowman and Ron Garcia. == Best Paper Awards == To reward excellent contributions, TFP awards a prize for the best paper accepted for the formal proceedings. TFP traditionally pays special attention to research students, acknowledging that students are almost by definition part of new subject trends. A student paper is one for which the authors state that the paper is mainly the work of students, the students are listed as first authors, and a student would present the paper. A prize for the best student paper is awarded each year. In both cases, it is the PC of TFP that awards the prize. In case the best paper happens to be a student paper, that paper will then receive both prizes. == Instructions to Author == Papers must be submitted at: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tfp2019 Authors of papers have the choice of having their contributions formally reviewed either before or after the Symposium. == Pre-symposium formal review == Papers to be formally reviewed before the symposium should be submitted before an early deadline and receive their reviews and notification of acceptance for both presentation and publication before the symposium. A paper that has been rejected in this process may still be accepted for presentation at the symposium, but will not be considered for the post-symposium formal review. == Post-symposium formal review == Papers submitted for post-symposium review (draft papers) will receive minimal reviews and notification of acceptance for presentation at the symposium. Authors of draft papers will be invited to submit revised papers based on the feedback received at the symposium. A post-symposium refereeing process will then select a subset of these articles for formal publication. == Paper categories == There are two types of submission, each of which can be submitted either for pre-symposium or post-symposium review: Extended abstracts. Extended abstracts are 4 to 10 pages in length. Full papers. Full papers are up to 20 pages in length. Each submission also belongs to a category: research position project evaluation overview paper Each submission should clearly indicate to which category it belongs. Additionally, a draft paper submission—of either type (extended abstract or full paper) and any category—can be considered a student paper. A student paper is one for which primary authors are research students and the majority of the work described was carried out by the students. The submission should indicate that it is a student paper. Student papers will receive additional feedback from the PC shortly after the symposium has taken place and before the post-symposium submission deadline. Feedback is only provided for accepted student papers, i.e., papers submitted for presentation and post-symposium formal review that are accepted for presentation. If a student paper is rejected for presentation, then it receives no further feedback and cannot be submitted for post-symposium review. == Format == Papers must be written in English, and written using the LNCS style. For more information about formatting please consult the Springer LNCS web site (http://www.springer.com/lncs). == Program Committee == Program Co-chairs William J. Bowman University of British Columbia Ronald Garcia University of British Columbia Matteo Cimini University of Massachusetts Lowell Ryan Culpepper Czech Technical Institute Joshua Dunfield Queen's University Sam Lindley University of Edinburgh Assia Mahboubi INRIA Nantes Christine Rizkallah University of New South Wales Satnam Singh Google AI Marco T. Morazán Seton Hall University John Hughes Chalmers University and Quviq Nicolas Wu University of Bristol Tom Schrijvers KU Leuven Scott Smith Johns Hopkins University Stephanie Balzer Carnegie Mellon University Viktória Zsók Eötvös Loránd University