Stream: Archive Mirror: Isabelle Users Mailing List

Topic: [isabelle] Announcement of SCSS 2009


view this post on Zulip Email Gateway (Aug 18 2022 at 13:34):

From: Temur Kutsia <kutsia@risc.uni-linz.ac.at>
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SCSS 2009
TUNISIA - JAPAN WORKSHOP ON
SYMBOLIC COMPUTATION IN SOFTWARE SCIENCE
September 22-24, 2009
Gammarth, Tunisia
http://www2.score.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp/scssWorkshop/index.html

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IMPORTANT DATES
===============
Abstract submission: May 29, 2009
Acceptance notification: June 22, 2009
Final versions of full papers: August 30, 2009
Workshop: September 22-24, 2009

SCOPE
=====
Symbolic computation is the science of computing with symbolic objects
(terms, formulae, programs, algebraic objects, geometrical objects, etc).
Powerful symbolic algorithms have been developed during the past decades
like theorem proving techniques, software verification, model checking,
rewriting techniques, network security, Groebner bases, characteristic sets,
etc.

In this workshop, we solicit papers on algorithms and techniques of symbolic
computations and their applications in software science.
The topics of the workshop include:

* theorem proving methods and techniques
* algorithm (program) synthesis
* algorithm (program) verification
* formal methods for the analysis of network security
* termination analysis of algorithms (programs)
* complexity analysis of algorithms (programs)
* extraction of specifications from algorithms (programs)
* generation of inductive assertion for algorithm (programs)
* algorithm (program) transformations
* component-based programming
* computational origami
* query languages (in particular for XML documents)
* semantic web
* etc.

SCSS 2009 workshop is the second in the SCSS workshop series.
SCSS 2008 took place at the Research Institute for Symbolic Computation
(RISC), Hagenberg, Austria. The Workshop grew out of internal workshops that
bring together researchers from SCORE (Symbolic Computation Research Group,
University of Tsukuba, Japan), the Theorema Group at RISC (Research
Institute for Symbolic Computation, Johannes Kepler University, Linz -
Hagenberg, Austria), SSFG (Software Science Foundation Group, Kyoto
University, Japan) and Sup'Com (University of November 7th at Carthage,
Tunisia). SCSS is open for the international community and welcomes paper
submissions.

VENUE
=======
The workshop will be held at Ramada Hotel in Gammarth, Tunisia.
Gammarth is 20km north east of Tunis and 10km north of the archeological
site of Carthage. The legendary Phoenician princess Dido founded Carthage
and the city possessed economic, cultural, and military power in the
Mediterranean during Punic and Roman eras.

INVITED SPEAKERS
================

PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
=================

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
=================

LOCAL ORGANIZERS
================

SUBMISSION
===========
Abstracts and papers or extended abstracts should be submitted using
EasyChair: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scss2009

Papers or extended abstracts should be prepared in LaTeX, formatted
according to the EasyChair style (style files are available from
http://www.easychair.org/easychair.zip), and should not exceed
16 pages.

PUBLICATION
===========
Accepted papers will be available during the workshop as the proceedings of
SCSS 2009. We plan to have a special issue of the Journal of Symbolic
Computation on SCSS 2009. The final decision for organizing the special
issue will be made after the workshop. The full version of selected papers
will be considered for the publication of the special issue subjected to the
normal peer review process of the Journal of Symbolic Computation.


Last updated: Nov 21 2024 at 12:39 UTC