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ICALP 2023 : International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and ProgrammingConference Series : International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
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.
The 2023 edition has the following features: Submissions are anonymous, and there is a rebuttal phase. The conference is planned as a physical, in-person event. This will be the 50th ICALP conference and some special events are planned. Important dates and information Submissions: February 11, 2023 at 11am CET Rebuttal: March 22-25, 2023 Author notification: April 21, 2023 Camera-ready version: May 5, 2023 Early registration: TBA Conference: July 10-14, 2023 (Workshops on July 10, 2023) Deadlines are firm; late submissions will not be considered. Conference website: https://icalp2023.cs.upb.de/ Twitter: @ICALPconf Submission (tracks A and B): EasyChair ICALP 2023 Submission guidelines Papers must present original research on the theory of computer science. No prior publication and no simultaneous submission to other publication outlets (either a conference or a journal) is allowed. Authors are encouraged to also make full versions of their submissions freely accessible in an on-line repository such as ArXiv, HAL, ECCC. Submissions take the form of an extended abstract of no more than 15 pages, excluding references and a clearly labelled appendix. The appendix may consist either of omitted proofs or of a full version of the submission, and it will be read at the discretion of program committee members. The extended abstract has to present the merits of the paper and its main contributions clearly, and describe the key concepts and technical ideas used to obtain the results. Submissions must provide the proofs which can enable the main mathematical claims of the paper to be fully verified. Submissions are anonymous. The conference will employ a fairly 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 are in the third person (e.g., not “We build on our previous work …” but rather “We build on the work of …”). The purpose of this double-blind process is to help PC members and external reviewers come to an initial judgment about the paper without bias, and not to make it impossible for them to discover who the authors are 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. The submissions are done via Easychair to the appropriate track of the conference (see topics below). The use of pdflatex and the LIPIcs style are mandatory: papers that deviate significantly from the required format risk rejection without consideration of merit. During the rebuttal phase, authors will have from March 22-25 to view and respond to initial reviews. Further instructions will be sent to authors of submitted papers before that time. At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register for the conference, and all talks are in-person. In exceptional cases, there may be support for remotely presenting a talk. Papers authored only by students should be marked as such upon submission in order to be eligible for the best student paper awards of the track. 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. Topics 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 and Complexity Aspects of Network Economics Algorithmic Aspects of Biological and Physical Systems Algorithmic Aspects of Networks and Networking Algorithmic Aspects of Security and Privacy Algorithmic Game Theory and Mechanism Design Approximation and Online Algorithms Combinatorial Optimization Combinatorics in Computer Science Computational Complexity Computational Geometry Computational Learning Theory Cryptography Data Structures Design and Analysis of Algorithms Distributed and Mobile Computing Foundations of Machine Learning Graph Mining and Network Analysis Parallel and External Memory Computing Parameterized Complexity Quantum Computing Randomness in Computation Sublinear Time and Streaming Algorithms Theoretical Foundations of Algorithmic Fairness Track B: Automata, Logic, Semantics, and Theory of Programming Algebraic and Categorical Models of Computation Automata, Logic, and Games Database Theory, Constraint Satisfaction Problems, and Finite Model Theory Formal and Logical Aspects of Learning Formal and Logical Aspects of Security and Privacy Logic in Computer Science and Theorem Proving Models of Computation: Complexity and Computability Models of Concurrent, Distributed, and Mobile Systems Models of Reactive, Hybrid, and Stochastic Systems Principles and Semantics of Programming Languages Program Analysis, Verification, and Synthesis Type Systems and Typed Calculi |
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