- From: Geoff Sutcliffe <geoff@cs.miami.edu>
- Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2015 10:38:49 -0400 (EDT)
- To: public-argumentation@w3.org
LPAR-20 call for workshop papers: - Workshop on the Implementation of Logics(IWIL-2015) - Models for Formal Analysis of Real Systems (MARS 2015) - First International Workshop on Focusing (WoF'15) ================================================================ Call for papers IWIL-2015 LPAR'20 Workshop on the Implementation of Logics http://www.eprover.org/EVENTS/IWIL-2015.html ================================================================= SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 5 October 2015 General Information ------------------- The 11th International Workshop on the Implementation of Logics will be held in November 2015 in conjunction with the 20th International Conference on Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning in Suva, Fiji Scope ----- We are looking for contributions describing implementation techniques for and implementations of automated reasoning programs, theorem provers for various logics, logic programming systems, and related technologies. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: - Propositional logic and decision procedures, including SMT - First-order and higher order logics - Non-classical logics, including modal, temporal, description, non-monotonic reasoning - Formal foundations for efficient implementation of logics - Data structures and algorithms for the efficient representation and processing of logical concepts - Proof/model search organization and heuristics for logical reasoning systems - Data analysis and machine learning approaches to search control - Techniques for proof/model search visualization and analysis - Practical constraint handling - Reasoning with ontologies and other large theories - Implementation of efficient theorem provers and model finders for different logics - System descriptions of logical reasoning systems - Issues of reliability, witness generation, and witness verification - Evaluation and benchmarking of provers and other logic-based systems - I/O standards and communication between reasoning systems We are particularly interested in contributions that help the community to understand how to build useful and powerful reasoning systems, and how to apply them in practice. Submissions ----------- Researchers interested in participating are invited to submit a position statement (2 pages), a short paper (up to 5 pages), or a full papers (up to 15 pages) via the EasyChair page for IWIL-2015, https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iwil2015 Submissions will be refereed by the program committee, which will select a balanced program of high-quality contributions. Submissions should be in standard-conforming PDF. Final versions will be required to be submitted in LaTeX using the easychair.cls class file. Proceedings will be published as EasyChair Proceedings. If number and quality of the submissions warrant it, we plan to produce a special issue of a recognized journal on the topic of the workshop. Important Dates --------------- Submission of papers/abstracts: October 5th, 2015 Notification of acceptance: October 26th, 2015 Camera ready versions due: November 9th, 2015 Workshop: November 23rd, 2015 Program committee ----------------- Boris Konev (Co-Chair) University of Liverpool Stephan Schulz (Co-Chair) DHBW Stuttgart Laurent Simon (Co-Chair) University of Bordeaux Christoph Benzmüller Freie Universität Berlin Armin Biere Johannes-Kepler Universität Linz Jasmin Blanchette INRIA/LORIA/Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik Guillaume Burel ENSIIE/CÉDRIC Simon Cruanes INRIA Paris-Rocquencourt Tommi Junttila Aalto University Konstantin Korovin University of Manchester Albert Oliveras Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya Jens Otten Universität Potsdam Andrew Reynolds Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne Peter Schneider-Kamp University of Southern Denmark Geoff Sutcliffe University of Miami Josef Urban Radboud University/Czech Technical University Uwe Waldmann Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik Previous Workshops ------------------ - Reunion Workshop (held in conjunction with LPAR'2000 on Reunion Island) - Second Workshop (with LPAR'2001 in Havana, Cuba) - Third Workshop (with LPAR'2002 in Tbilisi, Georgia) - Fourth Workshop (with LPAR'2003 in Almati, Kazakhstan) - Fifth Workshop (with LPAR'2004 in Montevideo, Uruguay) - Sixth Workshop (with LPAR'2006 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia) - Seventh Workshop (with LPAR'2008 in Doha, Qatar) - Eighth Workshop (with LPAR‘2010 in Yogyakarta, Indonesia) - Ninth Workshop (with LPAR‘2012 in Merida, Venezuela) - Tenth Workshop (with LPAR‘2013 in Stellenbosch, South Africa) ======================================================================= Call for papers Workshop on Models for Formal Analysis of Real Systems (MARS 2015) Affiliated With LPAR 20 November 23, 2015 Suva, Fiji http://hoefner-online.de/mars15/ ======================================================================= SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 24/31 August 2015 Aim: Logics and techniques for automated reasoning have often been developed with formal analysis and formal verification in mind. To show applicability, toy examples or tiny case studies are typically presented in research papers. Since the theory needs to be developed first, this approach is reasonable. However, to show that a developed approach actually scales to real systems, large case studies are essential. The development of formal models of real systems usually requires a perfect understanding of informal descriptions of the system-sometimes found in RFCs or other standard documents-which are usually just written in English. Based on the type of system, an adequate specification formalism needs to be chosen, and the informal specification translated into it. Abstraction from unimportant details then yields an accurate, formal model of the real system. The process of developing a detailed and accurate model usually takes a large amount of time, often months or years; without even starting a formal analysis. When publishing the results on a formal analysis in a scientific paper, details of the model have to be skipped due to lack of space, and often the lessons learnt from modelling are not discussed since they are not the main focus of the paper. The workshop aims at discussing exactly these unmentioned lessons. Examples are: * Which formalism is chosen, and why? * Which abstractions have to be made and why? * How are important characteristics of the system modelled? * Were there any complications while modelling the system? * Which measures were taken to guarantee the accuracy of the model? The workshop emphasises modelling over verification. In particular, we invite papers that present full Models of Real Systems, which may lay the basis for future formal analysis. The workshop will bring together researchers from different communities that all aim at verifying real systems and are developing formal models for such systems. Areas where large models often occur are within networks, (trustworthy) systems and software verification (from byte code up to programming- and specification languages). An aim of the workshop is to present different modelling approaches and discuss pros and cons for each of them. Submission ---------- Submissions must be unpublished and not be submitted for publication elsewhere. Contributions are limited to 8 pages EPTCS style (http://style.eptcs.org) (not counting the appendix), but shorter extended abstracts are welcome. Appendices (of arbitrary length) can be used to present all details of a formalised model; the appendices will be part of the proceedings. Submissions must be in English and submitted in PDF format via EasyChair (TBC). All submissions will be peer reviewed by at least three referees based on their novelty, relevance and technical merit. The proceedings will be published as part of the open access series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science (EPTCS). Important Dates (AoE) --------------- * Submission of abstracts: Monday 24 August 2015 * Submission: Monday 31 August 2015 * Notification: Friday 9 October 2015 * Final version: Monday 2 November 2015 * Workshop: Monday 23 November 2015 Programme Committee ------------------- Rance Cleaveland (University of Maryland, USA) Hubert Garavel (INRIA, France) Rob van Glabbeek (co-chair) (NICTA, Sydney, Australia) Jan Friso Groote (co-chair) (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands) He Jifeng (Easy China Normal University, China) Holger Hermanns (Saarland University, Germany) Peter Hoefner (co-chair) (NICTA, Sydney, Australia) Gerald Holzmann (NASA/JPL, USA) Magnus Myreen (Chalmers University, Sweden) Viet Yen Nguyen (Fraunhofer IESE, Germany) Bill Roscoe (University of Oxford, UK) Pamela Zave (AT&T Laboratories, USA) PROGRAMME CHAIRS and WORKSHOP ORGANISERS: Rob van Glabbeek (NICTA, Sydney, Australia) Jan Friso Groote (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands) Peter Hoefner (NICTA, Sydney, Australia) CONTACT: mars15@cs.stanford.edu ======================================================================= Call for papers First International Workshop on Focusing WoF'15 Suva, Fiji, 23 November 2015 Affiliated with LPAR-20 http://www.qatar.cmu.edu/iliano/svc/conf/wof15/ ======================================================================= SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 4/11 September 2015 Focusing is a proof search strategy that alternates two phases: an inversion phase where invertible sequent rules are applied exhaustively and a chaining phase where it selects a formula and decomposes it maximally using non-invertible rules. Focusing is one of the most exciting recent developments in computational logic: it is complete for many logics of interest and provides a foundation for their use as programming languages and rewriting calculi. This workshop has the purposes of bringing together researchers who work on or with focusing, to foster discussion and to report on recent advances. Topics of interest include: - Focusing in forward, backward and hybrid logic programming languages - Focusing in theorem proving - Focusing for substructural logics - Focused term calculi - Implementation techniques - Parallelism and concurrency - Focusing in security - Pearls of focusing Invited Speaker --------------- TBA Important Dates --------------- Abstract submission deadline: Friday September 4th Submission deadline: Friday September 11th Notification to authors: Friday October 9th Final version due: Friday October 30th Workshop date: Monday November 23rd Submission ---------- In addition to regular papers, we also solicit "work in progress" reports, in a broad sense. Those do not need to report fully polished research results, but should be interesting for the community at large. Submitted papers should be in PDF, formatted using the EPTCS style guidelines. The length is restricted to 12 pages for regular papers and6 pages for "Work in Progress" papers. Submission is via EasyChair (link on the WoF'15 web page). Proceedings ----------- Accepted regular papers will be included in the proceedings of WoF'15, which will be published in the Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science series (EPTCS). Program Committee ----------------- Iliano Cervesato (Carnegie Mellon University, co-chair) Kaustuv Chaudhuri (Inria & LIX/École polytechnique) Paul Blain Levy (University of Birmingham) Chuck Liang (Hofstra University) Elaine Pimentel (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte) Carsten Schürmann (ITU Copenhagen & Demtech, co-chair)
Received on Thursday, 2 July 2015 14:39:13 UTC