Newsletter 113 January 14, 2008 ******************************************************************* * Past issues of the newsletter are available at http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/lics/newsletters/ * Instructions for submitting an announcement to the newsletter can be found at http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/lics/newsletters/inst.html * To unsubscribe, send an email with "unsubscribe" in the subject line to lics@informatik.hu-berlin.de ******************************************************************* TABLE OF CONTENTS * ANNOUNCEMENTS LICS 2008 - Abstract Deadline TODAY LICS 2008 - List of Workshops * AWARDS Ackermann Award 2008 - Call for Nominations * CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS RUSSELL 2008 - PROOF THEORY MEETS TYPE THEORY WORKSHOP ON MODAL FIXPOINT LOGICS CSL 2008 - Call for Papers/Panels/Workshops CAV 2008 - Call for Papers AMAST 2008 - Call for Papers CONCUR 2008 - Call for Papers * POSITIONS POSTDOCTORAL POSITION AT INRIA NANCY (FRANCE) LOGIC IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (LICS) 2008 * The deadline for submitting a title and short abstract to LICS 2008 is TODAY, Monday January 14 11:59pm EST. * The deadline for extended abstracts is 11:59pm EST, Monday, January 21, 2008. LOGIC IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (LICS) 2008 There will be five workshops co-located with LICS 2008. * June 21: (CoLocated with CSF) - FCS-ARSPA-WITS (L.Bauer, S.Etalle, J.den Hartog, L.Vigano) - Security and Rewriting, SecRet2008 (Dan Dougherty, Santiago Escobar) * June 22: - FCS-ARSPA-WITS (continued from the 21st) - Proof-Carrying Code PCC08 (Ian Stark, David Aspinall) * June 23: - Intuitionist Modal Logics and Applications IMLA08 (Valeria de Paiva, Aleks Nanevski) - International Workshop on Logical Frameworks and MetaLanguages (LFMTP) (Andreas Abel, Christian Urban) ACKERMANN AWARD 2008 - THE EACSL OUTSTANDING DISSERTATION AWARD FOR LOGIC IN COMPUTER SCIENCE Call for Nominations * Eligible for the 2008 Ackermann Award are PhD dissertations in topics specified by the EACSL and LICS conferences, which were formally accepted as PhD theses at a university or equivalent institution between 1.1.2006 and 31.12. 2007. * The deadline for submission is 15.3.2008. * Submission details are available at www.dimi.uniud.it/~eacsl/award.html www.cs.technion.ac.il/eacsl * The award consists of - a diploma, - an invitation to present the thesis at the CSL conference, - the publication of the abstract of the thesis and the laudation in the CSL proceedings, - travel support to attend the conference. * The 2008 Ackermann Award will be presented to the recipients at the annual conference of the EACSL (CSL'08). * The jury consists of seven members: - The president of EACSL, J. Makowsky (Haifa); - The vice-president of EACSL, D. Niwinski (Warsaw); - One member of the LICS organizing committee, G. Plotkin (Edinburgh); - J. van Benthem (Amsterdam) - B. Courcelle (Bordeaux); - M. Grohe (Berlin); - M. Hyland (Cambridge); - A. Razborov (Moscow and Princeton). - possibly one more member to be appointed by the EACSL Board * The jury is entitled to give more than one award per year. * The previous Ackermann Award recipients were: 2005: Mikolaj Bojanczyk, Konstantin Korovin, Nathan Segerlind; 2006: Stefan Milius and Balder ten Cate; 2007: Dietmar Berwanger, Stephane Lengrand and Ting Zhang. * For the three years 2007-2009, the Award is sponsored by Logitech, S.A., Romanel, Switzerland, the worlds leading provider of personal peripherals. RUSSELL'08 - PROOF THEORY MEETS TYPE THEORY A "Small Workshop" of the European TYPES Project Call for Participation and Contributed Talks Swansea, Wales, 15-16 March 2008 http://cs.swan.ac.uk/~csetzer/russell08/index.html * In 1908 the British Philosopher and Mathematician Bertrand Russell, who was born and died in Wales, published the article "Mathematical Logic as based on the Theory of Types" which contained a first matured exposition of Type Theory. In the same year, Ernst Zermelo's "Untersuchungen ueber die Grundlagen der Mengenlehre I" introduced the basis of current axiomatic set theory as an alternative approach to the foundations of Mathematics. A central theme of Proof Theory is to compare these different foundations. Proof Theory uses as its main tool ordinal notation systems, the basis of which was laid by Oswald Veblen in his paper "Continuous Increasing Functions of Finite and Transfinite Ordinals", again in 1908. A century later, Proof Theory and Type Theory are flourishing more than ever before, and their manifold interconnections are driving important developments in Mathematics and Computer Science. At this workshop we meet and discuss cutting edge research at the interface of Proof Theory and Type Theory. * Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Proof Theory of Type Theory; Relationship between Type Theory and Set Theory; Program extraction from proofs; Normalisation and Cut-elimination; New approaches to ordinal analysis Universes and reflection principles; Equality in Type Theory; Philosophical and historical aspects of Proof Theory and Type Theory * Invited Speakers: To be confirmed. * Participation and Contributed Talks: Please send an email to Anton Setzer (a.g.setzer@swansea.ac.uk) as soon as possible, but no later than the 29th of February 2008. WORKSHOP ON MODAL FIXPOINT LOGICS Call for contributions March 25-27, Amsterdam, the Netherlands Organizers: Luigi Santocanale and Yde Venema. * The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers from various backgrounds, in particular, computer scientists and pure logicians, in order to discuss modal fixpoint logics from various perspectives, including those of model theory, proof theory, algebra and duality, and automata theory. * Deadline for submission of contributed papers: February 1, 2008. * Invited speakers: Giovanna D'Agostino, Johan van Benthem, Marcello Bonsangue, Dietmar Berwanger, Erich Graedel (to be confirmed), Dexter Kozen (to be confirmed), Giacomo Lenzi, Damian Niwinski, Colin Stirling, Thomas Studer, Albert Visser, Igor Walukiewicz, and Thomas Wilke (to be confirmed). * Further information can be found at http://staff.science.uva.nl/~yde/mfl 21st IEEE Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF) Pittsburgh, PA, USA, June 23-25, 2008 Sponsored by the Technical Committee on Security and Privacy of the IEEE Computer Society * CSF 2008 website: http://www.cylab.cmu.edu/CSF2008/ CSF home page: http://www.ieee-security.org/CSFWweb/ CSF CFP: http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~andrei/CSF08/cfp.html * The IEEE Computer Security Foundations (CSF) series brings together researchers in computer science to examine foundational issues in computer security. Over the past two decades, many seminal papers and techniques have been presented first at CSF. The CiteSeer Impact page (http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/impact.html ) lists CSF as 38th out of more than 1200 computer science venues, top 3.11% in impact based on citation frequency. * This year's CSF will be colocated with the 23rd IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science (LICS). It will be held at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. * We are proud to announce a joint CSF/LICS invited speaker: David Basin. * New theoretical results in computer security are welcome. Also welcome are more exploratory presentations, which may examine open questions and raise fundamental concerns about existing theories. Panel proposals are sought as well as papers. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: - Access control - Anonymity and Privacy - Authentication - Data and system integrity - Database security - Decidability and complexity - Distributed systems security - Electronic voting - Executable content - Formal methods for security - Information flow - Intrusion detection - Language-based security - Network security - Resource usage control - Security for mobile computing - Security models - Security protocols - Trust and trust management * While CSF welcomes submissions beyond these topics, note that the main focus of CSF is foundational security: submissions that lack foundational aspects risk rejection. * Proceedings, published by the IEEE Computer Society Press, will be available at the symposium, and selected papers will be invited for submission to the Journal of Computer Security. * Important Dates Workshop proposals due: Tuesday, November 20, 2007 Papers due: Tuesday, January 29, 2008 Panel proposals due: Thursday, March 6, 2008 Notification: Monday, March 17, 2008 Camera-ready papers: Wednesday, April 9, 2008 Symposium: June 23-25, 2008 * There are PDF and HTML versions of this call for papers at http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~andrei/CSF08/cfp.html. CAV 2008 - 20TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER AIDED VERIFICATION Call for Papers Call for Nominations for CAV Award July 7-14, 2008, Princeton, NJ, USA http://www.princeton.edu/cav2008 * CAV 2008 is the 20th in a series dedicated to the advancement of the theory and practice of computer-aided formal analysis methods for hardware and software systems. CAV considers it vital to continue its leadership in hardware verification, maintain its recent momentum in software verification, and consider new domains such as biological systems. * Events: - CAV Award (please see website for Call for Nominations) - Four pre-conference (July 7, 8), three post-conference (July 14) workshops * Important dates: - Jan 28, 2008: Paper submission deadline - Jan 28, 2008: Nominations for CAV Award deadline - March 26, 2008: Author notification for papers * Details available on conference website. AMAST 2008 - 12th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ALGEBRAIC METHODOLOGY AND SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGY Call for Papers July 28-31, 2008, Urbana, Illinois, United States http://amast08.cs.uiuc.edu * The major goal of the AMAST conferences is to promote research towards setting software technology on a firm, mathematical basis. Work towards this goal is a collaborative, international effort with contributions from both academia and industry. The envisioned virtues of providing software technology developed on a mathematical basis include: correctness, which can be proved mathematically; safety, so that developed software can be used in the implementation of critical systems; portability, i.e., independence from computing platforms and language generations; and evolutionary change, i.e., the software is self-adaptable and evolves with the problem domain. * Topics of interest include: systems software technology; application software technology; concurrent and reactive systems; formal methods in industrial software development; formal techniques for software requirements, design; evolutionary software/adaptive systems; logic programming, functional programming, object paradigms; constraint programming and concurrency; program verification and transformation; programming calculi; specification languages and tools; formal specification and development case studies; logic, category theory, relation algebra, computational algebra; algebraic foundations for languages and systems, coinduction; theorem proving and logical frameworks for reasoning; logics of programs; algebra and coalgebra. For system demonstrations or ordinary papers: software development environments; support for correct software development; system support for reuse; tools for prototyping; component based software development tools; validation and verification; computer algebra systems; theorem proving systems. * Important dates: Abstract submission due: 1 March 2008; Paper submission due: 8 March 2008; Notification: 20 April 2008 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONCURRENCY THEORY (CONCUR 08) Call for Papers Toronto, Canada, August 19-22, 2008 http://www.cse.yorku.ca/concur08 * Submission deadline: April 11, 2008 * CONCUR 08, the 19th International Conference on Concurrency Theory, will take place in Toronto, Canada, on August 19-22, 2008. The purpose of the CONCUR conferences is to bring together researchers, developers, and students in order to advance the theory of concurrency, and promote its applications (in a broad sense). * CONCUR 08 will be collocated with the 27th Annual ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on the Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC 2008). Furthermore, there will be a symposium celebrating the contributions of Nancy Lynch and a number of workshops on topics related to CONCUR and PODC. The overall event will take place at the University of Toronto on August 17-24, 2008. * CONCUR 08 welcomes two categories of papers: - regular papers; - tool papers. * Submissions are solicited in all areas of semantics, logics, verification and analysis of concurrent systems. The principal topics include (but are not limited to): - basic models of concurrency (such as abstract machines, domain theoretic models, game theoretic models, process algebras, and Petri nets); - logics for concurrency (such as modal logics, temporal logics and resource logics); - models of specialized systems (such as biology-inspired systems, circuits, hybrid systems, mobile systems, multi-core processors, probabilistic systems, real time systems, synchronous systems, and web services); - verification and analysis techniques for concurrent systems (such as abstract interpretation, atomicity checking, model-checking, race detection, run-time verification, state-space exploration, static analysis, synthesis, testing, theorem proving and type systems); - related programming models (such as distributed or object-oriented). * The link for submissions is http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=CONCUR08 * Important dates Abstract Submission: April 4, 2008 Paper Submission: April 11, 2008 (strict) Notification: May 27, 2008 Final version due: June 17, 2008 * Program committee Luca de Alfaro, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Pedro R. D'Argenio, Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Argentina Jos Baeten, Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands Christel Baier, Technical University Dresden, Germany Eike Best, Carl von Ossietzky Universitaet Oldenburg, Germany Dirk Beyer, Simon Fraser University, Canada Patricia Bouyer, LSV, CNRS & ENS Cachan, France Mario Bravetti, University of Bologna, Italy Franck van Breugel (co-chair), York University, Canada Ilaria Castellani, INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France Marsha Chechik (co-chair), University of Toronto, Canada Wan Fokkink, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/CWI, the Netherlands Rob van Glabbeek, National ICT Australia Arie Gurfinkel, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Anna Ingolfsdottir, Reykjavik University, Iceland Radha Jagadeesan, DePaul University, USA Barbara Koenig, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany Marta Kwiatkowska, University of Oxford, UK Orna Kupferman, Hebrew University, Israel Kim Larsen, Aalborg University, Denmark Nancy Lynch, MIT, USA P. Madhusudan, UIUC, USA Ugo Montanari, University of Pisa, Italy Anca Muscholl, Universite Bordeaux, France Catuscia Palamidessi, INRIA Futurs and LIX, France Corina Pasareanu, Perot Systems/NASA Ames Research Center, USA Scott Smolka, SUNY at Stony Brook, USA Nobuko Yoshida, Imperial College London, UK POSTDOCTORAL POSITION AT INRIA NANCY (FRANCE) Field: Computational Linguistics Topic: Surface realisation and large scale over-generation detection * Deadline for application: February 15, 2008. * Starting Date: 01 November 2008 * Employer: INRIA (French National Institute for Research in Computer Science) Nancy Grand Est (France) * Job Description: The Lorraine Laboratory of IT Research and its Applications (Nancy, France) has a position for a Postdoctoral fellow to work on the development of a surface realiser for French. * Applicants must have a ** recent doctoral degree ** (PhD viva held in may 2007 or later) or defend their PhD before the end of 2008. They must have expertise in an area relevant to the project (linguistics, computational linguistics, computer science), strong hands-on experience in Natural Language Processing and a particular interest in NL generation. A good knowledge of Haskell is a necessity. * Further particulars and details of how to apply are available at: http://www.loria.fr/~gardent * The official closing date is February 15, 2007, but applications will be processed until the position is filled. * Contact: Claire Gardent <claire.gardent@loria.fr>
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