- From: Marc Denecker <marc.denecker@cs.kuleuven.be>
- Date: Mon, 06 Jul 2015 12:51:37 +0200
- To: tag@cs.utexas.edu, planetkr@kr.org, dmanet@zpr.uni-koeln.de, event@in.tu-clausthal.de, cfp@eventseer.net, conferences@computer.org, dlv-status@dlvsystem.com, elsnet-list@elsnet.org, grin-eventi@grin-informatica.it, hvg@cl.cam.ac.uk, kr@kr.org, learningrobots@det.ua.pt, semantic-web@w3.org, theorem-provers@ai.mit.edu, wvscience@cs.uni-potsdam.de, las-lics@lists.tu-berlin.de, metaprl-users@metaprl.org
- CC: Marc Denecker <Marc.Denecker@cs.kuleuven.be>, Ruben Lapauw <ruben.lapauw@cs.kuleuven.be>, Tomi Janhunen <Tomi.Janhunen@aalto.fi>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ GTTV'15 3rd Workshop on Grounding, Transforming, and Modularizing Theories with Variables 27 September, Lexington, KY, USA. Workshop collocated with LPNMR 2015 URL: https://sites.google.com/site/gttv2015/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ IMPORTANT DATES ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ - Paper submission: 8 July, - Notification of acceptance: 17 August - Camera ready submission: 1 September - Workshop: 27 September, 2015 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Although many efficient solvers used in formal reasoning operate at the propositional level, in most application domains for knowledge representation and reasoning the use of variables is crucial for allowing compact and flexible formal descriptions. As a result, a common situation in many different areas of formal reasoning is to deal with high level descriptions containing variables while using a propositional solver as a back-end. The technique of removing variables, replacing them by their possible ground instances, is commonly known as Grounding, and has attracted research interest from quite diverse areas such as Logic Programming and Non-Monotonic Reasoning, Theorem Proving, Planning, Deductive Databases, Formal Methods, and others. This workshop aims to bring together researchers from different areas with a common interest in grounding and transformations for theories with variables, establishing a meeting point from which a cross-fertilization of new ideas may emerge. Workshop topics include, but are not limited to: * Transformations and pre-processing for grounding * Equivalence and correspondence for theories with variables * Modularity and compositionality * Syntactic restrictions for grounding * Grounding for theories with functions * Selective on-the-fly grounding, lazy grounding, grounding on demand * Grounding algorithms: heuristics, computational complexity, etc * Benchmarks, challenging applications and system comparisons * Grounding for specific solvers including, but not limited to: ASP, SAT, SMT, constraint programming, mixed integer programming, etc * Grounding in hybrid systems: ontologies and ASP, etc * Other techniques for variables: quantifier elimination, etc. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ INVITED SPEAKERS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Andreas Pieris, Vienna University of Technology Roland Kaminski, Potsdam University ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All submissions must be written in English and formatted according to the Springer LNCS/LNAI author instructions. http://www.springer.com/comp/lncs/Authors.html Two types of contributions are accepted: Technical papers and System descriptions. Technical papers must present original research and not exceed 13 pages including title page, references and figures. We also encourage introductory system descriptions that help different groups make their work known to the others. For system presentations a length of 6 pages is recommended. Paper submission is electronic and managed through the following easychair GTTV'15 webpage https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=gttv15 MULTIPLE SUBMISSION POLICY GTTV'15 will not accept any paper which, at the time of submission, has already been published or accepted for publication in a journal or previous conference. However, authors may freely submit their papers elsewhere during or after GTTV'15 review period, since GTTV'15 is a specialized workshop without archival proceedings and intended for a limited audience. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PROGRAM COMMITTEE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Marcello Balduccini, Drexel University Pedro Cabalar, University of A Coruña Martin Gebser, Aalto University Emilia Oikarinen, Aalto University Simona Perri, University of Calabria Joohyung Lee, Arizona State University Torsten Schaub, University of Potsdam Shahab Tasharrofi, Aalto University Evgenia Ternovska, Simon Fraser University Mirek Truszczynski, University of Kentucky Agustín Valverde Ramos, University of Málaga Concepción Vidal Martin, University of A Coruña Stefan Woltran, Technische Universität Wien ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ORGANIZING COMMITTEE ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Marc Denecker, KU Leuven Tomi Janhunen, Aalto University -- Prof. Marc Denecker KU Leuven Departement Computerwetenschappen tel: ++32 (0)16/32.75.57 Celestijnenlaan 200A Room A02.145 fax: ++32 (0)16/32.79.96 B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium email: Marc.Denecker@cs.kuleuven.be http://people.cs.kuleuven.be/~marc.denecker/ ........................................................................ Disclaimer: http://www.kuleuven.be/cwis/email_disclaimer.htm
Received on Monday, 6 July 2015 10:54:31 UTC