[Om-announce] CADE-27: Second Call for Papers

geoff at cs.miami.edu geoff at cs.miami.edu
Mon Feb 18 14:52:40 CET 2019


The 27th International Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE-27)
Natal, Brazil
25-30 August 2019
http://www.cade-27.info

CALL FOR PAPERS

CADE is the major international forum for presenting research on all aspects 
of automated deduction. High-quality submissions on the general topic of 
automated deduction, including foundations, applications, implementations, 
theoretical results, practical experiences and user studies are solicited.

Key dates:
  Abstract deadline (extended):        20 February 2019
  Submission deadline (extended):      27 February 2019

* 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 artificial intelligence.

Submissions can be made in two categories: regular papers and system 
descriptions. The page limit in Springer LNCS style is 15 pages excluding 
references for regular papers and 10 pages excluding references 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 Submissions must be unpublished and not submitted for 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 must 
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. 
For papers containing experimental evaluations, all data needed to rerun 
the experiments must be available. 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 review process will 
include a feedback/rebuttal period where authors will have the option to 
respond to reviewer comments. The PC chair may solicit further reviews after 
the rebuttal period.

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.

IMPORTANT DATES
  Abstract deadline:        20 February 2019
  Submission deadline:      27 February 2019
  Rebuttal phase:           2  April    2019
  Notification:             15 April    2019
  Final version:            27 May      2019

SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Papers should be submitted via

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cade27

CADE-27 ASSOCIATED EVENTS

Automated Reasoning: Challenges, Applications, Directions, Exemplary
Achievements (ARCADE), http://cl-informatik.uibk.ac.at/users/swinkler/arcade/
The CADE ATP System Competition, http://www.tptp.org/CASC/27/
Deduction Mentoring Workshop
Logical and Semantic Frameworks, with Applications (LSFA),
https://sites.google.com/view/lsfa2019
Proof eXchange for Theorem Proving (PxTP), http://pxtp.gforge.inria.fr/2019/
Theorem Prover Components for Educational Software (ThEdu'19),
http://www.uc.pt/en/congressos/thedu/thedu19
The 6th Vampire Workshop

CADE-27 ORGANIZERS

Conference Chair:
  Elaine Pimentel        Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil

Organizers:
  Carlos Olarte          Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil
  Joao Marcos            Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil
  Claudia Nalon          University of Brasilia, Brazil
  Giselle Reis           CMU, Qatar

Program Committee Chair:
  Pascal Fontaine        Universite de Lorraine, CNRS, Inria, LORIA, France

Workshop, Tutorial, and Competition Chair:
  Giles Reger            University of Manchester, UK

Publicity Chair:
  Geoff Sutcliffe        University of Miami, USA

Program Committee:
  Carlos Areces, FaMAF - Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Argentina
  Franz Baader, TU Dresden, Germany
  Clark Barrett, Stanford University, USA
  Jasmin Christian Blanchette, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  Maria Paola Bonacina, Universita degli Studi di Verona, Italy
  Leonardo Mendonca de Moura, Microsoft Research, USA
  Hans de Nivelle, Nazarbayev University, Astana, Kazakhstan
  Clare Dixon, University of Liverpool, UK
  Mnacho Echenim, Universite de Grenoble, France
  Marcelo Finger, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
  Pascal Fontaine, Universite de Lorraine, CNRS, Inria, LORIA, France
  Silvio Ghilardi, Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy
  Juergen Giesl, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
  Rajeev Gore, The Australian National University, Australia
  Stefan Hetzl, Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria
  Marijn J. H. Heule, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
  Nao Hirokawa, JAIST, Japan
  Moa Johansson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
  Cezary Kaliszyk, University of Innsbruck, Austria
  Deepak Kapur, University of New Mexico, USA
  Benjamin Kiesl, Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria
  Konstantin Korovin, The University of Manchester, UK
  Laura Kovacs, Technische Universitaet Wien, Austria
  Ramana Kumar, DeepMind, UK
  Claudia Nalon, University of Brasilia, Brazil
  Vivek Nigam, Federal University of Paraiba & Fortiss, Brazil & Germany
  Carlos Olarte, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil
  Jens Otten, University of Oslo, Norway
  Andre Platzer, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
  Andrew Reynolds, The University of Iowa, USA
  Philipp Ruemmer, Uppsala University, Sweden
  Renate A. Schmidt, The University of Manchester, UK
  Stephan Schulz, DHBW Stuttgart, Germany
  Roberto Sebastiani, University of Trento, Italy
  Natarajan Shankar, SRI International, USA
  Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans, Universitaet Koblenz-Landau, Germany
  Martin Suda, Czech Technical University, Czech Republic
  Geoff Sutcliffe, University of Miami, USA
  Rene Thiemann, University of Innsbruck, Austria
  Uwe Waldmann, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
  Christoph Weidenbach, Max Planck Institute for Informatics, Germany
  Sarah Winkler, University of Innsbruck, Austria



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