European Symposium on Algorithms

Event Dates

Sep 05, 2022 - Sep 09, 2022

Location

Potsdam, Germany

Submission Deadline

Apr 21, 2022

Scope

The European Symposium on Algorithms (ESA) is one of the premier conferences on algorithms. It is organized in collaboration with the European Association for Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS) and is a part of ALGO 2022.

Important Dates

Paper submission deadline: April 21

Notification: June 18

Camera ready: July 3

Proceedings published: September 2

Conference: September 5-9, 2021, in Potsdam, Germany

Call for Papers

The symposium seeks original algorithmic contributions for problems with relevant theoretical and/or practical applications. Papers with a strong emphasis on the theoretical analysis of algorithms should be submitted to Track A, while papers reporting on the results of extensive experimental evaluations and/or providing original contributions to the engineering of algorithms for practical applications should be submitted to Track B. Submissions that prove or explain known results in a much clearer, simpler or more elegant way than done before should be submitted to track S. There will be a Best Student Paper Award as well as a Best Paper Award, both sponsored by EATCS. In order for a paper to be considered for the Best Student Paper Award, all of its authors are required to be students.

Paper submission and proceedings

Papers should be submitted electronically via the EasyChair submission system. The ESA 2022 proceedings will be published in the Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs) series.

Submission Guidelines

Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract or full paper of at most 11 pages excluding the title page, references, and an optional appendix. The submission should be typeset using a 10-point or larger font in a single-column format with ample spacing throughout and 2cm margins all around on A4-size paper. We recommend, but not strictly require, making your initial submission adhere to LIPIcs publication guidelines. Proofs omitted due to space constraints must be placed in an appendix. This appendix can even comprise an entire full version of the paper. The appendix will be read by the program committee members at their discretion. In particular, appendices of accepted papers are not going to be published in the proceedings. The main part of the submission should therefore contain a clear technical presentation of the merits of the paper, including a discussion of the paper’s importance within the context of prior work and a description of the key technical and conceptual ideas used to achieve its main claims. These guidelines are strict: submissions deviating significantly from these guidelines risk being rejected without consideration of their merits. Papers should be submitted electronically via the EasyChair submission system. Results previously published (or scheduled for publication) in another conference proceedings or journal will not be accepted at ESA. Simultaneous submission to other conferences with published proceedings, or to multiple tracks of ESA 2022, is also not permitted. By submitting a paper the authors acknowledge that in case of acceptance, at least one of the authors must register at ALGO 2022, attend the conference, and present the paper.

Double-Blind Reviewing

The conference will employ a lightweight double-blind reviewing process. Submissions should not reveal the identity of the authors in any way. In particular, authors’ names, affiliations, and email addresses should not appear at the beginning or in the body of the submission. Authors should ensure that any references to their own related work is in the third person (e.g., not “We build on our previous work …” but rather “We build on the work of …”). The purpose of the double-blind reviewing is to help PC members and external reviewers come to an initial judgment about the paper without bias, not to make it impossible for them to discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult. In particular, important references should not be omitted or anonymized. In addition, authors should feel free to disseminate their ideas or draft versions of their paper as they normally would. For example, authors may post drafts of their papers on the web, submit them to arXiv, and give talks on their research ideas. In case there exist publicly available versions of the submission online, the authors might mention this in their submission (without providing references/links), and briefly explain the differences if any. Alternatively, they might communicate the details to the chairs, who will keep them confidential unless revealing them to the PC is needed for a fair judgment. Authors with further questions on double-blind reviewing are encouraged to contact the PC chairs.

Topics

Papers presenting original research in all areas of algorithmic research are sought, including but not limited to:

Algorithm engineering

Algorithmic aspects of networks

Algorithmic game theory

Algorithmic Data Science

Approximation algorithms

Computational biology

Computational finance

Computational geometry

Combinatorial optimization

Data compression

Data structures

Databases and information retrieval

Distributed and parallel computing

Graph algorithms

Hierarchical memories

Heuristics and meta-heuristics

Mathematical programming

Mobile computing

Online algorithms

Parameterized algorithms

Pattern matching

Quantum computing

Randomized algorithms

Scheduling and resource allocation problems

Streaming algorithms

Announcement: ESA Track S

This year, the European Symposium on Algorithms ESA’22 will have a Track S (for Simplicity) inviting contributions that simplify algorithmic results.

We would like to expand the community around simplification of algorithmic

results, encourage and reward research towards simplification and clarity.

We find that simpler algorithms are easier to implement, bridging the gap

between theory and practice, and we find that new simple or elegant proofs

are easier to understand and to teach, and may contain interesting new

insights whose relevance only the future will reveal.

Scope: We invite submissions that prove or explain known results in a

much clearer, simpler or more elegant way than done before. Submissions

that improve on the state of the art from a theoretical or practical

viewpoint should instead be submitted to tracks A or B.

Paper assessment: Contingent on being in scope for ESA, submitted

papers will primarily be judged on the simplicity and elegance of their

proofs or algorithms, and the clarity of their presentation.

Track S will run as an experiment for the 2022 ESA in Potsdam, Germany.

It will have its own PC and PC chair, and the submission/acceptance

deadlines follow the schedule for tracks A and B.

Accepted Papers

Committees

Chairs

Shiri Chechik (track A), Tel Aviv University

Gonzalo Navarro (track B), Universidad de Chile

Eva Rotenberg (track S), Technical University of Denmark

Steering Committee

Hannah Bast (chair), Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg

Shiri Chechik, Tel Aviv University

Fabrizio Grandoni, IDSIA, USI-SUPSI

Robert Krauthgamer, The Weizmann Institute of Science

Petra Mutzel (Chair), University of Bonn

Gonzalo Navarro, Universidad de Chile

Rasmus Pagh , University of Copenhagen

Eva Rotenberg, Technical University of Denmark

Peter Sanders, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Sabine Storandt, University of Konstanz

PC members (Track A)

Mikkel Abrahamsen, University of Copenhagen

Peyman Afshani, Aarhus University

Pankaj K. Agarwal, Duke University

Sepehr Assadi, Rutgers University

Per Austrin, KTH

Leonid Barenboim, The Open University of Israel

Surender Baswana, IIT Kanpur

Maike Buchin, Ruhr University Bochum

Jaroslaw Byrka, University of Wrocław

Diptarka Chakraborty, National University of Singapore

Shiri Chechik (chair), Tel Aviv University

Vincent Cohen-Addad, Google Research

Mark de Berg, TU Eindhoven

Mahsa Derakhshan, UC Berkley and Northeastern University

Michael Dinitz, Johns Hopkins University

Michal Dory, ETH Zurich

Matthias Englert, University of Warwick

Thomas Erlebach, Durham University

Fedor Fomin, University of Bergen

Dimitris Fotakis, National Technical University of Athens

Hsin Hao Su, Boston College

Martin Hoefer, Goethe University

Ravishankar Krishnaswamy, Microsoft Research

Janardhan Kulkarni, Microsoft Research

Divyarthi Mohan, Tel Aviv University

Shay Mozes, Reichman University

Wolfgang Mulzer, Freie Universität Berlin

Ofer Neiman, Ben-Gurion University

Aleksandar Nikolov, University of Toronto

Sigal Oren, Ben-Gurion University

Fahad Panolan, IIT Hyderabad

Adi Rosén, FILOFOCS – CNRS

Sushant Sachdeva, University of Toronto

Stefan Schmid, University of Vienna and TU Berlin

Roy Schwartz, Technion

Bruce Shepherd, University of British Columbia

Shay Solomon, Tel Aviv University

Xiaorui Sun, University of Illinois

Dimitrios Thilikos, LIRMM, Université de Montpellier, CNRS

Ohad Trabelsi, The University of Michigan

Oren Weimann, University of Haifa

Philip Wellnitz, Max Planck Institute for Informatics

Raphael Yuster, University of Haifa

PC members (Track B)

Diego Arroyuelo, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María

Philip Bille, Danmarks Tekniske Universitet

Thomas Bläsius, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Christina Boucher, University of Florida

Sándor Fekete, Technische Universität Braunschweig

José Fuentes-Sepúlveda, Universidad de Concepción

Gramoz Goranci, Universitat Wien

Giuseppe Italiano, Università degli studi di Roma “Tor Vergata”

Shweta Jain, University of Utah

Dominik Kempa, Stony Brook University

Veli Mäkinen, University of Helsinki

Catherine McGeoch, Amherst College

David Mount, University of Maryland

Gonzalo Navarro (chair), Universidad de Chile

Steven Skiena, Stony Brook University

Matthias Stallmann, North Carolina State University

PC members (Track S)

Josh Alman, Columbia University

Michael Bender, Stony Brook University

Karl Bringmann, Saarland University

Raphaël Clifford, University of Bristol

Anne Driemel, Universität Bonn

Paweł Gawrychowski, University of Wrocław

Monika Henzinger, University of Vienna

John Iacono, Université libre de Bruxelles

Tomasz Kociumaka, University of California, Berkeley

Irina Kostitsyna, Eindhoven University of Technology

William Kuszmaul, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Rasmus Kyng, ETH Zürich

Kitty Meeks, University of Glasgow

Marcin Pilipczuk, University of Warsaw

Kent Quanrud, Purdue University

Eva Rotenberg (chair), Technical University of Denmark

Shikha Singh, Williams College

Jukka Suomela, Aalto University

Haitao Wang, Utah State University

Andreas Wiese, TU Munich

Anna Zych-Pawlewicz, University of Warsaw