[Om-announce] CFP: Workshop CEDAR 2008
Miki Hermann
hermann at lix.polytechnique.fr
Mon May 5 21:51:42 CEST 2008
Appologies for multiple copies
***********************************************************************
* *
* Complexity, Expressibility, and Decidability in Automated Reasoning *
* (CEDAR'08) *
* http://www.mpi-inf.mpg.de/~sofronie/cedar08.html *
* *
* Affiliated with IJCAR 2008 Sydney, Australia, 10-15 August 2008 *
* http://www.ijcar.org/2008/ *
* *
***********************************************************************
Decidability, and especially complexity and tractability of logical
theories is extremely important for a large number of
applications. Although general logical formalisms (such as predicate
logic or number theory) are undecidable, decidable theories or
decidable fragments thereof (sometimes even with low complexity) often
occur in mathematics, in program verification, in the verification of
reactive, real time or hybrid systems, as well as in databases and
ontologies. It is therefore important to identify such decidable
fragments and design efficient decision procedures for them. It is
equally important to have uniform methods (such as resolution,
rewriting, tableaux, sequent calculi, ...) which can be tuned to
provide algorithms with optimal complexity.
The goal of CEDAR is to bring together researchers interested in
problems that are in the interface between automated reasoning and
computational complexity, in particular in:
- identifying (fragments of) logical theories which are decidable,
identifying fragments thereof which have low complexity, and
analyzing possibilities of obtaining optimal complexity results
with uniform tools;
- analyzing decidability in combinations of theories and
possibilities of combining decision procedures;
- efficient implementations for decidable fragments;
- application domains where decidability resp. tractability are
crucial.
Topics
Topics of interest for CEDAR 2008 include (but are not restricted to):
- Complexity:
- complexity analysis for fragments of first- (or higher) order
logic
- complexity analysis for combinations of logical theories
(including parameterized complexity results)
- Expressibility (in logic, automated reasoning, algebra, ...)
- Decidability:
- decision procedures based on logical calculi such as:
resolution, rewriting, tableaux, sequent calculi, or natural deduction
- decidability in combinations of logical theories
- Application domains for which complexity issues are essential
(verification, security, databases, ontologies, ...)
The goal of CEDAR is to bring together researchers interested in
exploring the topics above, both at a theoretical level and motivated
by applications, and to enhance the interaction between automated
reasoning and computational complexity through invited and contributed
talks.
The ultimate aim is to expand the horizons of this area of research,
deepen the interactions, sensibilize other people from the automated
reasoning community to the complexity problems, and last but not
least, offer persons working in research and development centers of
software companies the possibility to get an overview of the problems.
Invited speaker
- Carsten Lutz (TU Dresden)
Program and Workshop Chairs
- Franz Baader (TU Dresden)
- Silvio Ghilardi (U. Milano)
- Miki Hermann (Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau)
- Ulrike Sattler (U. Manchester)
- Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (MPI, Saarbrücken)
Program Committee
- Carlos Areces (INRIA Nancy)
- Franz Baader (TU Dresden)
- Matthias Baaz (TU Wien)
- Maria Paola Bonacina (U. Verona)
- Sebastian Brandt (U. Manchester)
- Christian Fermüller (TU Wien)
- Silvio Ghilardi (U. Milano)
- Reiner Haehnle (Chalmers U.)
- Miki Hermann (Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau)
- Felix Klaedtke (ETH Zurich)
- Sava Krstic (Intel Corporation)
- Christopher Lynch (Clarkson U.)
- Bijan Parsia (U. Manchester)
- Silvio Ranise (LORIA/INRIA-Lorraine)
- Ulrike Sattler (U. Manchester)
- Renate Schmidt (U. Manchester)
- Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (MPI,Saarbrücken)
- Lidia Tendera (U. Opole)
- Ashish Tiwari (SRI International)
- Luca Vigano (U. Verona)
- Frank Wolter (U. Liverpool)
Submission and selection procedure:
We plan to accept three types of papers:
- Original papers (up to 15 pages, LNCS style, including
bibliography); should describe original research and contain
sufficient detail to assess the merits and relevance of the
contribution. Simultaneous submission of material is prohibited.
- Work in progress (up to 6 pages, LNCS style, without bibliography).
- Presentation-only papers (please submit an abstract of up to 3
pages, LNCS style + a link to the already published paper): may
describe work previously published. The abstracts of accepted
presentation-only papers will appear in the informal proceedings to
be distributed at the workshop (full papers in this category will not
be inserted in the proceedings). We are allowing the submission of
previously published work in order to allow researchers to
communicate good ideas that the attendees may not be aware of.
Given the informal style of the workshop, the submission of papers
presenting student's work and work in progress is encouraged.
Publication:
The final versions of the selected contributions will be collected in
a volume to be distributed at the workshop. These informal proceedings
will also be made accessible on the web.
Important Dates
- 19 May 2008: Submission deadline
- 19 June 2008: Notification
- 10 July 2008: Final version
- 10 August 2008: Workshop
Contact
For further informations please send an e-mail to
Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (sofronie [at] mpi-inf.mpg.de)
More information about the Om-announce
mailing list