[Om-announce] PADL'12 Second CFP

Neng-Fa Zhou zhou at sci.brooklyn.cuny.edu
Mon Aug 22 21:20:03 CEST 2011


                          Call for Papers

                          ===============

 

                  14th International Symposium on 

      Practical Aspects of Declarative Languages (PADL 2012)

 

            http://research.microsoft.com/~crusso/padl12

 

         Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA, January 23-24, 2012

                    Co-located with ACM POPL'12

 

 

 

                      Conference Description

                      ======================

 

   Declarative languages build on sound theoretical bases to provide

attractive frameworks for application development. These languages

have been successfully applied to many different real-world

situations, ranging from data base management to active networks to

software engineering to decision support systems.

 

   New developments in theory and implementation have opened up new

application areas. At the same time, applications of declarative

languages to novel problems raise numerous interesting research

issues. Well-known questions include designing for scalability,

language extensions for application deployment, and programming

environments. Thus, applications drive the progress in the theory and

implementation of declarative systems, and benefit from this progress

as well.

 

   PADL is a forum for researchers and practitioners to present

original work emphasizing novel applications and implementation

techniques for all forms of declarative concepts, including,

functional, logic, constraints, etc. Topics of interest include, but

are not limited to:

 

   * Innovative applications of declarative languages

   * Declarative domain-specific languages and applications

   * Practical applications of theoretical results

   * New language developments and their impact on applications

   * Declarative languages and Software Engineering

   * Evaluation of implementation techniques on practical applications

   * Practical experiences and industrial applications

   * Novel uses of declarative languages in the classroom

   * Practical extensions such as constraint-based, probabilistic, and 

     reactive languages.

 

   PADL'12 welcomes new ideas and approaches pertaining to

applications and implementation of declarative languages. In this

occasion PADL is co-located, as traditionally, with ACM POPL, which

will be held immediately following PADL, January 25-27. The symposium

will be held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

 

 

 

              Important Dates and Submission Guidelines

              =========================================

 

              Abstract Submission:    September 10, 2011

              Paper Submission:       September 17, 2011

              Notification:             October 22, 2011

              Camera-ready:             November 5, 2011

              Symposium:             January 23-24, 2012

 

   Authors should submit an electronic copy of the full paper in PDF

using the Springer LNCS format. The submission will be done through

EasyChair conference system. If electronic submission is impossible,

please contact the program chairs for information on how to submit

hard copies. All submissions must be original work written in

English. Submissions must be unpublished and not submitted for

publication elsewhere. Work that already appeared in unpublished or

informally published workshops proceedings may be submitted. PADL'12

will accept both technical and application papers:

 

   * Technical papers must describe original, previously unpublished

     research results. Technical papers must not exceed 15 pages in

     Springer LNCS format.

   * Application papers are a mechanism to present important practical

     applications of declarative languages that occur in industry or

     in areas of research other than Computer Science. Application

     papers will be published in the Springer-Verlag conference

     proceedings, and will be presented in a separate session.

     Application papers are expected to describe complex and/or

     real-world applications that rely on an innovative use of

     declarative languages. Application descriptions, engineering

     solutions and real-world experiences (both positive and negative)

     are solicited. The limit for application papers is 6 pages in

     Springer LNCS format.

 

 

                         Program Committee

                         =================

 

    Marcello Balduccini, Intelligent Systems Department, Kodak Research Labs


    Edwin Brady, University of St Andrews, Scotland 

    Henning Christiansen, Roskilde University, Denmark 

    Agostino Dovier, University of Udine, Italy 

    Matthew Flatt, University of Utah, USA 

    Gopal Gupta, University of Texas at Dallas, USA 

    John Hughes, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; Quviq AB 

    Gabriele Keller, University of New South Wales, Australia 

    Lunjin Lu, Oakland University, USA 

    Marc Pouzet, École normale supérieure, France 

    Ricardo Rocha, University of Porto, Portugal 

    Andreas Rossberg, Google Germany GmbH, Germany 

    Claudio Russo, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK (co-chair) 

    Kostis Sagonas, Uppsala Univeristy, Sweden 

    Satnam Singh, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK 

    Zoltan Somogyi, University of Melbourne, Australia 

    Eijiro Sumii, Tohoku University, Japan 

    Terrance Swift, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal; Johns Hopkins
University, USA 

    Andrew Tolmach, Portland State University, USA 

    Jan Wielemaker, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands 

    Roland Yap, National University of Singapore, Republic of Singapore 

    Kwangkeun Yi, Seoul National University, Korea 

    Neng-Fa Zhou, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, USA
(co-chair) 

 

                              Contacts

                              ========

 

   For additional information about papers and submissions, please

contact the Program Chairs:

 

    Claudio Russo

    Microsoft Research Cambridge,UK 

    Email: crusso <AT> microsoft <DOT> com

    

    Neng-Fa Zhou

    Brooklyn College, The City University of New York, USA

    Email: zhou <AT> sci <DOT> brooklyn <DOT> cuny <DOT> edu 

 

 

                      With the Cooperation of

                      =======================

              

               The Association for Logic Programming (ALP)

                            ACM SIGPLAN

                   Microsoft Research, Cambridge 

                ===================================

 

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