25-29 Sep 2017
CALL FOR WORKSHOPS AND TUTORIALS Three of the main conferences on automated reasoning -- TABLEAUX, FroCoS, and ITP - will be held in Brasilia, Brazil, between 25 and 29 September 2017. Following the long tradition of those events, we invite researchers and practitioners to submit proposals for co-located workshops and in-depth tutorials on topics relating to automated theorem proving and its applications. Workshops/tutorials can target the automated reasoning community in general, focus on a particular theorem proving system, or highlight more specific issues or recent developments. Co-located events will take place between 23 and 24/25 September and will be held on the same premises as the main conference. Conference facilities are offered free of charge to the organisers. Workshop/tutorial-only attendees will enjoy a significantly reduced registration fee. Detailed organisational matters such as paper submission and review process, or publication of proceedings, are up to the organisers of individual workshops. All accepted workshops/tutorials will be expected to have their program ready by 18 August 2017. Proposals for workshops/tutorials should contain at least the following pieces of information: - name and contact details of the main organiser(s) - (if applicable:) names of additional organisers - title and organisational style of event (tutorial, public workshop, project workshop, etc.) - preferred length of workshop (between half day and two days) - estimated number of attendees - short (up to one page) description of topic - (if applicable:) pointers to previous editions of the workshop, or to similar events Proposals are invited to be submitted by email to nalon@unb.br, no later than 9 December 2016. Selected events will be notified by 23 December 2016. The workshop/tutorial selection committee consists of the TABLEAUX, FroCoS, and ITP program chairs and the conference organisers. -- [LOGIC] mailing list http://www.dvmlg.de/mailingliste.html Archive: http://www.illc.uva.nl/LogicList/ provided by a collaboration of the DVMLG, the Maths Departments in Bonn and Hamburg, and the ILLC at the Universiteit van Amsterdam