- From: Geoff Sutcliffe <geoff@cs.miami.edu>
- Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2014 08:38:11 -0400 (EDT)
- To: public-argumentation@w3.org
---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CALL FOR WORKSHOPS, TUTORIALS, SYSTEM COMPETITIONS, AND PAPERS 25th International Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE-25) Berlin, Germany, 1-7 August 2015 http://www.cade-25.info Submission deadlines: 14 November 2014 (workshops/tutorials/competitions) 16/23 February 2015 (papers) CADE is the major international forum at which research on all aspects of automated deduction is presented. The 25th jubilee edition will feature a special session on the past, present, and future of automated deduction with Ursula Martin University of Oxford Frank Pfenning Carnegie Mellon University David Plaisted University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Andrei Voronkov University of Manchester as invited speakers. In addition, there will be invited presentations by Ulrich Furbach University of Koblenz Edward Zalta Stanford University CALL FOR WORKSHOPS Workshop proposals for CADE-25 are solicited. Both well-established workshops and newer ones are encouraged. Similarly, proposals for workshops with a tight focus on a core automated reasoning specialization, as well as those with a broader, more applied focus, are very welcome. Please provide the following information in your application document: + Workshop title. + Names and affiliations of organizers. + Proposed workshop duration (from half a day to two days) and preferred day(s). + Brief description of the goals and the scope of the workshop. Why is the workshop relevant for CADE? + Is the workshop new or has it met previously? In the latter case information on previous meetings should be given (e.g., links to the program, number of submissions, number of participants). + What are the plans for publication? CALL FOR TUTORIALS Tutorial proposals for CADE-25 are solicited. Tutorials are expected to be half-day events, with a theoretical or applied focus, on a topic of interest for CADE-25. Proposals should provide the following information: + Tutorial title. + Names and affiliations of organizers. + Brief description of the tutorial's goals and topics to be covered. + Whether or not a version of the tutorial has been given previously. CADE will take care of printing and distributing notes for tutorials that would like this service. CALL FOR SYSTEM COMPETITIONS The CADE ATP System Competition (CASC), which evaluates automated theorem proving systems for classical logics, has become an integral part of the CADE conferences. Further system competition proposals are solicited. The goal is to foster the development of automated reasoning systems in all areas relevant for automated deduction in a broader sense. Proposals should include the following information: + Competition title. + Names and affiliations of organizers. + Duration and schedule of the competition. + Room/space requirements. + Description of the competition task and the evaluation procedure. + Is the competition new or has it been organized before? In the latter case information on previous competitions should be given. + What computing resources are required and how will they be provided? CALL FOR PAPERS High-quality submissions on the general topic of automated deduction, including foundations, applications, implementations, and practical experiences are solicited. * Logics of interest include propositional, first-order, equational, higher-order, classical, description, modal, temporal, many-valued, constructive, other non-classical, meta-logics, logical frameworks, type theory, set theory, as well as any combination thereof. * Paradigms of interest include theorem proving, model building, constraint solving, computer algebra, model checking, proof checking, and their integration. * Methods of interest include resolution, superposition, completion, saturation, term rewriting, decision procedures, model elimination, connection methods, tableaux, sequent calculi, natural deduction, as well as their supporting algorithms and data structures, including matching, unification, orderings, induction, indexing techniques, proof presentation and explanation, proof planning. * Applications of interest include program analysis, verification and synthesis of software and hardware, formal methods, computational logic, computer mathematics, natural language processing, computational linguistics, knowledge representation, ontology reasoning, deductive databases, declarative programming, robotics, planning, and other areas of AI. Submissions can be made in the categories regular papers and system descriptions. The page limit in Springer LNCS style is 15 pages for regular papers and 10 pages for system descriptions. Submissions must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. They will be judged on relevance, originality, significance, correctness, and readability. System descriptions should contain a link to a working system and will also be judged on usefulness and design. Proofs of theoretical results that do not fit in the page limit, executables of systems, and input data of experiments should be made available, via a reference to a website or in an appendix of the paper. Reviewers will be encouraged to consider this additional material, but submissions must be self-contained within the respective page limit; considering the additional material should not be necessary to assess the merits of a submission. The proceedings of the conference will be published in the Springer LNCS/LNAI series. Formatting instructions and the LNCS style files can be obtained at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html At every CADE conference the Program Committee selects one of the accepted papers to receive the CADE Best Paper Award. The award recognizes a paper that the Program Committee collegially evaluates as the best in terms of originality and significance, having substantial confidence in its correctness. Overall technical quality, completeness, scholarly accuracy, and readability are also considered. Characteristics associated with a best paper include, for instance, introduction of a strong new technique or approach, solution of a long-standing open problem, introduction and solution of an interesting and important new problem, highly innovative application of known ideas or existing techniques, and presentation of a new system of outstanding power. Under exceptional circumstances, the Program Committee may give two awards (ex aequo) or give no award. At CADE-25 we also intend to award the best student paper (details will follow). IMPORTANT DATES Workshop/Tutorials/System Competitions: Submission deadline: 14 November 2014 Notification: 28 November 2014 Papers: Abstract deadline: 16 February 2015 Submission deadline: 23 February 2015 Rebuttal phase: 15-18 April 2015 Notification: 26 April 2015 Final version: 17 May 2015 Workshops and Tutorials: 1 August to 3 August (morning) 2015 Competitions: 1 to 7 August 2015 Conference: 3 August (afternoon) to 7 August 2015 SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS Proposals for workshops, tutorials, and system competitions should be uploaded via https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cade25workshopstutor Papers should be submitted via https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cade25 CADE-25 ORGANIZERS Conference Chair: Christoph Benzmüller Freie Universität Berlin Program Committee Co-Chairs: Amy Felty University of Ottawa Aart Middeldorp University of Innsbruck Workshop, Tutorial, and Competition Co-Chairs: Jasmin Blanchette Technische Universität München Andrew Reynolds EPFL Lausanne Publicity and Web Chair: Julian Röder Freie Universität Berlin Program Committee Carlos Areces Universidad Nacional de Córdoba Alessandro Armando University of Genova Christoph Benzmüller Freie Universität Berlin Josh Berdine Microsoft Research Jasmin Blanchette Technische Universität München Marta Cialdea Mayer Universita di Roma Tre Stephanie Delaune CNRS Gilles Dowek Inria Amy Felty University of Ottawa Reiner Hähnle Technical University of Darmstadt Stefan Hetzl Vienna University of Technology Marijn Heule The University of Texas at Austin Nao Hirokawa JAIST Ullrich Hustadt University of Liverpool Deepak Kapur University of New Mexico Gerwin Klein NICTA and UNSW Laura Kovács Chalmers University of Technology Carsten Lutz Universität Bremen Assia Mahboubi Inria Aart Middeldorp University of Innsbruck Albert Oliveras Technical University of Catalonia Nicolas Peltier CNRS Brigitte Pientka McGill University Ruzica Piskac Yale University André Platzer Carnegie Mellon University Andrew Reynolds EPFL Lausanne Christophe Ringeissen LORIA-INRIA Renate Schmidt University of Manchester Stephan Schulz DHBW Stuttgart Georg Struth University of Sheffield Geoff Sutcliffe University of Miami Alwen Tiu Nanyang Technological University Freek Wiedijk Radboud University Nijmegen
Received on Wednesday, 15 October 2014 12:38:40 UTC