15 July 2007
Bremen, Germany
[ The following text is in the "X-UNKNOWN" character set. ] [ Your display is set for the "iso-8859-1" character set. ] [ Some characters may be displayed incorrectly. ] CALL FOR PAPERS Automated Deduction: Decidability, Complexity, Tractability (ADDCT'07) Workshop affiliated with CADE-21 Bremen, Germany, 15 July, 2007 http://www.mpi-inf.mpg.de/~sofronie/addct07.html 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 ADDCT is to bring together researchers interested 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 of interest for ADDCT include (but are not restricted to): - Decidability: - decision procedures based on logical calculi such as: resolution, rewriting, tableaux, sequent calculi, or natural deduction - decidability in combinations of logical theories - Complexity: - complexity analysis for fragments of first- (or higher) order logic - complexity analysis for combinations of logical theories (including parameterized complexity results) - Tractability (in logic, automated reasoning, algebra, ...) - Application domains for which complexity issues are essential (verification, security, databases, ontologies, ...) The goal of ADDCT is to bring together researchers interested in exploring the topics above, both at a theoretical level and motivated by applications. Submission and selection procedure ---------------------------------- Submissions are encouraged in one of the following categories: - 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: may describe work previously published, and 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. Submission of papers is via EasyChair at http://www.easychair.org/ADDCT07 The final versions of the selected contributions will be collected in a volume to be distributed at the workshop and made accessible on the web. A special issue in the Journal of Symbolic Computation on the topic of the ADDCT workshop is planned. Participants of ADDCT are encouraged to submit a paper to this special issue, but we would like to keep the submission open to everybody. For this special issue, the introduction of the paper MUST explicitly address the following questions in succinct and informal manner: - What is the problem? - Why is the problem important? - What has so far been done on the problem? - What is the contribution of the paper on the problem? - Is the contribution original? Explain why. - Is the contribution non-trivial? Explain why. This is a requirement from the Journal of Symbolic Computation: we would like to encourage the authors of papers submitted to ADDCT to already address such questions in the ADDCT submission. Organizers and Chairs Silvio Ghilardi (U. Milano) Ulrike Sattler (U. Manchester) Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (MPI,Saarbrcken) Ashish Tiwari (Menlo Park) Program Committee Matthias Baaz (T.U.Wien) Maria Paola Bonacina (U. Verona) Christian Fermller (T.U.Wien) Silvio Ghilardi (U. Milano) Reiner Haehnle (Chalmers U.) Felix Klaedtke (ETH Zurich) Sava Krstic (Intel Corporation) Viktor Kuncak (EPFL Lausanne) Carsten Lutz (TU Dresden) Christopher Lynch,(Clarkson U.) Silvio Ranise (LORIA/INRIA-Lorraine) Ulrike Sattler (U. Manchester) Renate Schmidt (U. Manchester) Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans (MPI,Saarbrcken) Ashish Tiwari (SRI) Luca Vigano (U. Verona) Important Dates 4 May 2007: Abstract submission 9 May 2007: Paper submission 5 June 2007: Notification 10 June 2007: Early registration deadline (tentative) 15 June 2007: Final version 15 July 2007: Workshop Contact For further informations please send an e-mail to Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans sofronie@mpi-inf.mpg.de