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Last call for papers CSL'22

=====================================
News and updates: 
Deadlines approaching: abstract submission -- 5.7 (in one week), Paper 
submission -- 12.7. 
Updated information on submission guidelines, Helena Rasiowa award, and 
collocated events. 
=====================================

Computer Science Logic (CSL) is the annual conference of the European
Association for Computer Science Logic (EACSL), see https://www.eacsl.org/. 

CSL is an interdisciplinary conference, spanning across both basic and 
application oriented research in mathematical logic and computer science.  

CSL'22 will be held on February 14 - 19, 2022, in Göttingen, Germany. 
Currently, we expect that the conference will be organized in a hybrid way: 
both with an in-presence component and an online component. A final decision on 
the format of the conference will be reached and announced in September 2021.

Website: http://csl2022.uni-goettingen.de/

Invited speakers:
-----------------

Annabelle McIver Macquarie (University, Sydney, Australia)
Udi Boker (IDC Herzliya, Israel)
Martin Escardo (University of Birmingham, UK)
Rosalie Iemhoff (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
Karen Lange (Wellesley College, USA)


Submission guidelines:
----------------------

Submitted papers must be in English and must provide sufficient detail to allow 
the Programme Committee to assess the merits of the paper. Full proofs may 
appear in a clearly marked technical appendix which will be read at the 
reviewers' discretion. Authors are strongly encouraged to include a well 
written introduction which is directed at all members of the PC.

The CSL 2022 conference proceedings will be published in Leibniz International 
Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), see 
https://submission.dagstuhl.de/documentation/authors. 

Authors are invited to submit contributed papers of no more than 15 pages in 
LIPIcs style (not including references), presenting unpublished work fitting 
the scope of the conference. Proofs omitted due to space constraints should be 
put into an appendix, to be read by the program committee members at their 
discretion.

Papers may not be submitted concurrently to another conference with refereed 
proceedings. The PC chairs should be informed of closely related work submitted 
to a conference or a journal.

Papers authored or co-authored by members of the PC are not allowed.

At least one of the authors of each accepted paper is expected to register for 
the conference and attend it in person or online, in order to present their 
papers.

Submissions should be made via easychair: 
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=csl2022


Helena-Rasiowa-Award:
---------------------

The Helena Rasiowa Award is the best student paper award for the CSL conference 
series, starting from CSL 2022.

The award will be given to the best paper (as decided by the PC) written solely 
by students or for which students were the main contributors.  A student in 
this context is any person who is currently studying for a degree or whose PhD 
award date is less than one year prior to the first day of the conference.

Read more about the contribution of Helena Rasiowa to logic and computer 
science, and their interplay, here: https://www.eacsl.org/?page_id=1104

At submission, the authors should clearly indicate if their paper is eligible 
for this award. 

Important dates:
----------------

Abstract submission: July 5, 2021 (AoE),
Paper submission: July 12, 2021 (AoE),
Notification: September 30, 2021,
Conference: February 14-19, 2022

List of topics:
---------------

   automated deduction and interactive theorem proving
   constructive mathematics and type theory
   equational logic and term rewriting
   automata and games, game semantics
   modal and temporal logic
   model checking
   decision procedures
   logical aspects of computational complexity
   finite model theory
   computability
   computational proof theory
   logic programming and constraints
   lambda calculus and combinatory logic
   domain theory
   categorical logic and topological semantics
   database theory
   specification, extraction and transformation of programs
   logical aspects of quantum computing
   logical foundations of programming paradigms
   verification and program analysis
   linear logic
   higher-order logic
   nonmonotonic reasoning

Program Committee:
------------------

Thorsten Altenkirch (Nottingham, UK)
Benedikt Bollig (Cachan, France)
Agata Ciabattoni (Vienna, Austria) 
Liron Cohen (Ben-Gurion University, Israel) 
Anupam Das (Birmingham, UK)
Claudia Faggian (Paris, France) 
Francesco Gavazzo (Bologna, Italy)
Stefan Göller (Kassel, Germany)
Willem Heijltjes (Bath, UK)
Sandra Kiefer (Aachen, Germany) 
Emanuel Kieronski (Wroclaw, Poland)
Bartek Klin (Warsaw, Poland)
Juha Kontinen (Helsinki, Finland)
Anthony Lin (Kaiserslautern, Germany)
Karoliina Lehtinen (Marseille, France) 
Florin Manea (Göttingen, Germany, co-chair)
Fredrik Nordvall Forsberg (Strathclyde, UK)
Liat Peterfreund (Paris, France and Edinburgh, UK) 
Daniela Petrisan (Paris, France)
Karin Quaas (Lepizig) 
Alex Simpson (Ljubljana, Slovenia, co-chair)
Pawel Sobocinski (Tallin, Estonia)
Anna Sokolova (Salzburg, Austria) 
Linda Brown Westrick (Connecticut, US)

Organization Committee:
-----------------------

  Fundamentals of Computer Science Group - University of Göttingen, Germany. 

Colocated events:
-----------------

LCC 2022: Logic and Computational Complexity
---------
Meetings of the workshop "Logic and Computational Complexity" are aimed at the 
foundational interconnections between logic and computational complexity, as 
present, for example, in implicit computational complexity (descriptive and 
type-theoretic methods); deductive formalisms as they relate to complexity 
(e.g. ramification, weak comprehension, bounded arithmetic, linear logic and 
resource logics); complexity aspects of finite model theory and databases; 
complexity-mindful program derivation and verification; computational 
complexity at higher type; and proof complexity. LCC 2022 will be the 23rd 
workshop in the series, see https://www.cs.swansea.ac.uk/lcc/. The program will 
consist of invited lectures as well as contributed papers selected by the 
Program Committee.

LMW@CSL: Logic Mentoring Workshop
---------
The Logic Mentoring Workshop introduces young researchers to the technical and 
practical aspects of a career in logic research. It is targeted at students, 
from senior undergraduates to graduates, and will include talks and panel 
sessions from leaders in the subject. Building on successful LMW editions from 
past years, its first winter edition will be collocated with CSL 2022.
Website: https://lmw.mpi-sws.org/csl/

Contact:
--------

Please send all questions about submissions to the PC co-chairs:
[email protected]

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