Logic List Mailing Archive

CfP: [Deadline Extension] RC 2024: Reversible Computation 2024, 4 -5 July 2024, Torun (Poland)

 ======================================
             *Final Call for Papers*
       *Reversible Computation 2024*
======================================

   July 4th – 5th, Torun, Poland

   https://rc2024.mat.umk.pl/

------------
| Scope    |
------------

Reversible computation has a growing number of promising application areas such as low power design, coding/decoding, debugging, testing and verification, database recovery, discrete event simulation, reversible algorithms, reversible specification formalisms, reversible programming languages, process algebras, and the modeling of biochemical systems.
Furthermore, reversible logic provides a basis for quantum computation with its applications, for example, in cryptography and in the development of highly efficient algorithms. First reversible circuits and quantum circuits have been implemented and are seen as promising alternatives to conventional CMOS technology.

The conference will bring together researchers from computer science, mathematics, and physics to discuss new developments and directions for future research in Reversible Computation. This includes applications of reversibility in quantum computation. Research papers, tutorials, tool demonstrations, and work-in-progress reports are within the scope of the conference. Invited talks by leading international experts will complete the program.

Contributions on all areas of Reversible Computation are welcome, including — but not limited to — the following topics:
     - Applications
     - Architectures
     - Algorithms
     - Bidirectional transformations
     - Circuit Design
     - Debugging
     - Fault Tolerance and Error Correction
     - Hardware
     - Information Theory
     - Physical Realizations
     - Programming Languages
     - Quantum Computation
     - Software
     - Synthesis
     - Theoretical Results
     - Testing
     - Verification

-------------------
| Important dates |
-------------------


* Abstract submission: February 18, 2024 Submission deadline: February 25, 2024* Notification to authors: March 22, 2024 Final version: April 14, 2024
Conference: July 4 - July 5, 2024

-------------------
| Invited Speaker |
-------------------

*Amr Sabry* is a Professor of Computer Science at Indiana University. His research interests are in the semantics, logical foundations, and implementations of programming languages. He has published on a range of themes including the typing, logical foundations, and programming applications of continuations and continuation-passing style, reasoning about monadic effects and staged computation, and programming language models of quantum computing. Together with Matthias Felleisen, Sabry wrote a series of papers on the use of continuations in the compilation of functional languages which includes one of the fifty most influential papers in the last twenty years of the ACM SIGPLAN Conference Programming Language Design and Implementation (PLDI). Together with Eugenio Moggi, Sabry gave what is considered the long-awaited definitive answer that monadic encapsulation of effects using rank-2 polymorphism is correct. His most recent research interests are related to quantum computing.

---------------------
| Program Committee |
---------------------

Programme Chairs

     Łukasz Mikulski ( Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland,
lukasz.mikulski@mat.umk.pl)
      Torben Ægidius Mogensen ( University of Copenhagen, Denmark,
torbenm@di.ku.dk)

Programme Committee Members

     Clément Aubert (Augusta University, USA)
     Kamalika Datta (German Research Centre for Artificial Intelligence, DFKI Bremen, Germany)
     Robert Glück (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
     James Hoey (University of Leicester, UK)
     Robin Kaarsgaard (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
     Ivan Lanese (Università di Bologna/INRIA, Italy)
     Andreas Malcher (Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen, Germany)
     Uwe Meyer (Technische Hochschule Mittelhessen, Germany)
     Claudio Mezzina (Università di Urbino, Italy)
     Iain Phillips (Imperial College, UK)
     Krzysztof Podlaski (University Of Lodz, Poland)
     Michael Kirkedal Thomsen (University of Oslo, Norway and University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
     Irek Ulidowski (University of Leicester, UK)
     Robert Wille (Technische Universität München, Germany)
     Shigeru Yamashita (Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto, Japan
     Tetsuo Yokoyama (Nanzan University, Japan)
     Shoji Yuen (Nagoya University, Japan)

---------------------
| How to Submit     |
---------------------

To submit a paper to the Reversible Computation conference, please follow these guidelines:
You can submit
     - Full research papers (16 pages maximum, including bibliography),
     - Work-in-progress or tool demonstration papers (6 pages maximum, including bibliography).

The paper submission will be accepted as a PDF file using the LNCS style.

Authors are encouraged to include their ORCID's in the paper.
Author(s) of accepted papers are expected to participate in the conference and to present their papers. We would appreciate it if one person would not present more than two papers at the conference. If more than two papers are accepted by a group of authors, we kindly ask that the papers be presented by different co-authors, as far as possible. PC chairs and general chairs are not permitted to submit papers to the conference.
All accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings and published by Springer as a Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) volume.

Papers are to be submitted via
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=rc2024.
--
[LOGIC] mailing list, provided by DLMPST
More information (including information about subscription management) can
be found here: http://dlmpst.org/pages/logic-list.php