ICALP 2015Posted in

42nd International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming

Event Dates

Jul 06, 2015 - Jul 10, 2015

Location

Kyoto, Japan

Submission Deadline

Feb 17, 2015

ICALP 2015

The 42nd International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming (ICALP 2015) will take place in the period 6-10 July 2015 in Kyoto, Japan. The conference will co-locate with LICS 2015, the 30th ACM/IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science. The ICALP 2015 conference chair is Kazuo Iwama (Kyoto University). ICALP is the main conference and annual meeting of the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS). As usual, the main conference will be preceded and/or followed by a series of workshops.

Papers presenting original research on all aspects of theoretical computer science are sought. Typical but not exclusive topics of interest are:

Track A: Algorithms, Complexity and Games

Algorithmic Game Theory

Approximation Algorithms

Combinatorial Optimization

Combinatorics in Computer Science

Computational Biology

Computational Complexity

Computational Geometry

Cryptography

Data Structures

Design and Analysis of Algorithms

Machine Learning

Parallel, Distributed and External Memory Computing

Randomness in Computation

Quantum Computing

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

Algebraic and Categorical Models

Automata, Games, and Formal Languages

Emerging and Non-standard Models of Computation

Databases, Semi-Structured Data and Finite Model Theory

Principles and Semantics of Programming Languages

Logic in Computer Science, Theorem Proving and Model Checking

Models of Concurrent, Distributed, and Mobile Systems

Models of Reactive, Hybrid and Stochastic Systems

Program Analysis and Transformation

Specification, Refinement, Verification and Synthesis

Type Systems and Theory, Typed Calculi

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

Algorithmic Aspects of Networks and Networking

Formal Methods for Network Information Management

Foundations of Privacy, Trust and Reputation in Networks

Mobile and Wireless Networks and Communication

Network Economics and Incentive-Based Computing Related to Networks

Networks of Low Capability Devices

Network Mining and Analysis

Overlay Networks and P2P Systems

Specification, Semantics, Synchronization of Networked Systems

Theory of Security in Networks

Important dates

Submission deadline: Tuesday, 17 February 2015, 23:59 PST (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-8)

Author notification: Wednesday, 15 April 2015

Final manuscript due: Thursday, 30 April 2015

Deadlines are firm; late submissions will not be considered.

Proceedings

ICALP proceedings are published in the Springer-Verlag ARCoSS (Advanced Research in Computing and Software Science) subseries of LNCS (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).

Invited Speakers

Keynote Speakers

Ken Kawarabayashi, NII, Japan

Valerie King, University of Victoria, Canada

Thomas Moscibroda, MSR Asia, China

Anca Muscholl, Universitè Bordeaux, France (Joint with LICS)

Peter O’Hearn, Facebook, UK (Joint with LICS)

Invited Tutorial Speakers (Joint with LICS)

Piotr Indyk, MIT, USA

Andrew Pitts, University of Cambridge, UK

Geoffrey Smith, Florida International University, USA

Masterclass speaker

Ryuhei Uehara, JAIST, Japan

Submission Guidelines

Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract of no more than 12 pages, including references, in LNCS style presenting original research on the theory of Computer Science. All submissions will be electronic via the EasyChair page for the conference, with three tracks (A, B and C):

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=icalp2015

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. Submissions must adhere to the specified format and length. Submissions that are too long or formatted incorrectly may be rejected immediately. All the technical details that are necessary for a proper scientific evaluation of a submission must be included in a clearly-labelled appendix, to be consulted at the discretion of program committee members. This includes, in particular, the proofs of all the key theorems in a paper.

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.

Organizers

Conference Chair: Kazuo Iwama, Kyoto University

Program Chairs

Track A: Bettina Speckmann, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Track B: Naoki Kobayashi, The University of Tokyo, Japan

Track C: Magnus M. Halldorsson, Reykjavik University, Iceland

Program Committees

Track A: Algorithms, complexity, and games

Peyman Afshani, Aarhus University, Denmark

Hee-Kap Ahn, POSTECH, South Korea

Hans Bodlaender Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Karl Bringmann, Max-Planck Institut für Informatik, Germany

Sergio Cabello, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Ken Clarkson, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA

Éric Colin de Verdière, CNRS and École Normale Supérieure Paris, France

Stefan Dziembowski, University of Warsaw, Poland

David Eppstein, University of California at Irvine, USA

Dimitris Fotakis, National Technical University of Athens, Greece

Paul Goldberg, University of Oxford, UK

MohammadTaghi Hajiaghayi, University of Maryland at College Park, USA

Jesper Jansson, Kyoto University, Japan

Andrei Krokhin, Durham University, UK

Asaf Levin, Technion, Israel

Inge Li Gørtz, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

Pinyan Lu, Microsoft Research Asia, China

Frédéric Magniez, Université Paris Diderot, France

Kazuhisa Makino, Kyoto University, Japan

Elvira Mayordomo, Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain

Ulrich Meyer, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Wolfgang Mulzer, Free University Berlin, Germany

Viswanath Nagarajan, University of Michigan, USA

Vicky Papadopoulou, European University Cyprus, Cyprus

Michał Pilipczuk, University of Bergen, Norway

Liam Roditty, Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Ignaz Rutter, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

Rocco Servedio, Columbia University, USA

Jens Schmidt, TU Ilmenau, Germany

Bettina Speckmann (chair), TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Csaba D. Tóth, California State University Northridge, USA

Takeaki Uno, National Institute of Informatics, Japan

Erik Jan van Leeuwen, Max-Planck Institut für Informatik, Germany

Rob van Stee, University of Leicester, UK

Ivan Visconti, University of Salerno, Italy

Track B: Logic, semantics, automata and theory of Programming

Andreas Abel, Chalmers and Gothenburg University, Sweden

Albert Atserias, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain

Christel Baier, TU Dresden, Germany

Lars Birkedal, Aarhus University, Denmark,

Luís Caires, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal

James Cheney, University of Edinburgh, UK

Wei Ngan Chin, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Ugo Dal Lago, University of Bologna, Italy

Thomas Ehrhard, CNRS, Université Paris Diderot, France

Zoltán Ésik, University of Szeged, Hungary

Xinyu Feng, University of Science and Technology of China, China

Wan Fokkink, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Shin-ya Katsumata, Kyoto University, Japan

Naoki Kobayashi (chair), The University of Tokyo, Japan

Eric Koskinen, New York University, USA

Antonín Kučera, Masaryk University, Czech Republic

Orna Kupferman, Hebrew University, Israel

Annabelle Mclver, Macquarie University, Australia

Dale Miller, INRIA Saclay, France

Markus Müller-Olm, University of Münster, Germany

Andrzej Murawski, Univeristy of Warwick, UK

Joel Ouaknine, Univeristy of Oxford, UK

Prakash Panangaden, McGill University, Canada

Pawel Parys, University. of Warsaw, Poland

Reinhard Pichler, TU Vienna, Austria

Simona Ronchi Della Rocca, University of Torino, Italy

Jeremy Siek, Indiana University, USA

Track C: Foundations of networked computation: Models, algorithms and information management

Ioannis Caragiannis, Univ. Patras, Greece

Katarina Cechlarova, Pavol Jozef Safarik Univ., Slovakia

Shiri Chechik, Tel Aviv Univ., Israel

Yuval Emek, Technion, Israel

Sándor Fekete, TU Braunschweig, Germany

Pierre Fraigniaud, CNRS and Paris Diderot, France

Leszek Gąsieniec, Univ. Liverpool, UK

Aristides Gionis, Aalto Univ., Finland

Magnús M. Halldórsson (chair), Reykjavik Univ, Iceland

Monika Henzinger, Univ. Wien, Austria

Bhaskar Krishnamachari, USC, USAL

Fabian Kuhn, Freiburg, Germany

Michael Mitzenmacher, Harvard Univ, USA

Massimo Merro, Univ. Verona, Italy

Gopal Pandurangan, Univ. Houston, USA

Pino Persiano, Salerno, Italy

R. Ravi, CMU, USA

Ymir Vigfusson, Emory Univ., USA

Roger Wattenhofer, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Masafumi Yamashita, Kyushu Univ., Japan