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ICALP 2017: Automata, Languages and Programming

10-14 Jul 2017
Warsaw, Poland

**** ICALP 2017 ***

44th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming 10-14 
July 2017, Warsaw (Poland), http://icalp17.mimuw.edu.pl

The 44th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming 
(ICALP) will take place in Warsaw (Poland) on 10-14 July 2017.

ICALP is the main conference and annual meeting of the European 
Association for Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS). As usual, ICALP will 
be preceded by a series of workshops, which will take place on July 10.

* Important dates

Submission deadline: Friday, February 17, 2017, 23:59 PST
Author notification: April 14, 2017
Final manuscript due: April 30, 2017

Deadlines are firm; late submissions will not be considered.


* Proceedings

ICALP proceedings are published in the Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics
(LIPIcs) series.  This is a series of high-quality conference proceedings across all fields in informatics
established in cooperation with Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz Center for Informatics.
LIPIcs volumes are published according to the principle of Open Access, i.e., they are available online and free of charge.


* Invited Speakers

Mikolaj Bojanczyk (University of Warsaw, Poland)
Monika Henzinger (University of Vienna, Austria)
Mikkel Thorup (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)


* Topics

Papers presenting original research on all aspects of theoretical computer science are sought.

Track A: Algorithms, Complexity and Games

Track B: Logic, Semantics, Automata and Theory of Programming

Track C: Foundations of Networked Computation: Models, Algorithms and
Information Management


* Submission Guidelines

Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract of no more than 12 
pages, excluding references, in the LIPIcs style 
(http://www.dagstuhl.de/en/publications/ lipics/) presenting original 
research on the theory of Computer Science. The usage of pdflatex and the 
LIPIcs style file (see 
http://drops.dagstuhl.de/styles/lipics-v2016/lipics-v2016-authors/lipics-v2016-sample-article.tex 
and http://drops.dagstuhl.de/styles/lipics-v2016/lipics-v2016-authors.tgz) 
are mandatory: papers that deviate significantly from the required format 
may be rejected without consideration of merit. All submissions are 
electronic via EasyChair: 
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=icalp2017

All technical details necessary for a proper evaluation of a submission 
must be included in the 12-page submission or in a clearly-labelled 
appendix, to be consulted at the discretion of program committee members.

Authors are encouraged to also make full versions of their submissions 
freely accessible in an on-line repository such as ArXiv, HAL, ECCC.

Submissions should be made to the appropriate track of the conference. No 
prior publication or simultaneous submission to other publication outlets 
(either a conference or a journal) is allowed.


* Should I submit my paper to Track A or Track C?

While the scope of Tracks A and B are generally well understood given 
their long history, the situation for Track C may be less obvious. In 
particular, some clarifications may be helpful regarding areas of 
potential overlap, especially between Tracks A and C.

The aim for Track C is to be the leading venue for theory papers truly 
motivated by networking applications, and/or proposing theoretical results 
relevant to real networking, certified analytically, but not necessarily 
tested practically. The motivation for the track was the lack of good 
venues for theory papers motivated by applications in networking. On the 
one hand, the good networking conferences typically ask for extended 
experiments and/or simulations, while the TCS community is hardly able to 
do such experiments or simulations. On the other hand, the good 
conferences on algorithms tend to judge a paper based only on its 
technical difficulty and on its significance from an algorithmic 
perspective, which may not be the same as when judging the paper from the 
perspective of impact on networks.

Several areas of algorithmic study of interest to track C have a broad 
overlap with track A. Graph algorithmics can belong in either, though if 
the work is not linked to networking, it is more appropriate in track A. 
Algorithmic game theory is another area of major overlap. Aspects 
involving complexity, the computation of equilibria and approximations, 
belong more in Track A, while results with applications in auctions, 
networks and some aspects of mechanism design belong in Track C.

Finally, it should be noted that algorithms and complexity of 
message-passing based distributed computing belong squarely in track C, 
while certain other aspects of distributed computing do not fall under its 
scope.

* Best Paper Awards

As in previous editions of ICALP, there will be best paper and best 
student paper awards for each track of the conference. In order to be 
eligible for a best student paper award, a paper should be authored only 
by students and should be marked as such upon submission.
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