CFP: International Conference on Logic Programming 2017
Call for Papers
33rd International Conference on Logic Programming (ICLP 2017)
(co-located with CP and SAT and following IJCAI)
Melbourne, Australia | August 28 - September 1, 2017 | http://iclp17.a4lp.org
Conference Scope
Since the first conference held in Marseille in 1982, ICLP has been the premier international conference for presenting research in logic programming. Contributions are sought in all areas of logic programming, including but not restricted to:
- Theory: Semantic Foundations, Formalisms, Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Knowledge Representation.
- Implementation: Compilation, Virtual Machines, Parallelism, Constraint Handling Rules, Tabling.
- Environments: Program Analysis, Transformation, Validation, Verification, Debugging, Profiling, Testing.
- Language Issues: Concurrency, Objects, Coordination, Mobility, Higher Order, Types, Modes, Assertions, Programming Techniques.
- Related Paradigms: Inductive and Co-inductive Logic Programming, Constraint Logic Programming, Answer-Set Programming, SAT-Checking.
- Applications: Databases, Big Data, Data Integration and Federation, Software Engineering, Natural Language Processing, Web and Semantic Web, Agents, Artificial Intelligence, Bioinformatics, and Education.
In addition to the presentations of accepted papers, the technical program will include invited talks, advanced tutorials, the doctoral consortium, and several workshops.
Important Dates (RP: Regular Paper / TC: Technical Communication)
- RP registration (abstract): 6 March, 2017
- RP submission: 13 March, 2017
- First notification (RPs): 24 April, 2017
- TC submission (extra round): 1 May, 2017
- Revision submission (RPs): 15 May, 2017
- Final notifications (RPs + TCs): 29 May, 2017
- Camera-ready copy (RPs + TCs): 19 June, 2017
- Conference: 28 Aug / 1 Sep, 2017
Submission Details
All submissions must be made via the EasyChair conference system (http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclp2017).
Submissions of regular papers (RPs) must follow the condensed TPLP format (template available from ICLP's web page) and not exceed 14 pages including bibliography. RPs may be supplemented with appendices for proofs and details of datasets which do not count towards the page limit and which will be available as appendices to the published paper. Three kinds of RPs will be accepted:
- Technical papers for technically sound, innovative ideas that can advance the state of logic programming;
- Application papers that impact interesting application domains;
- System and tool papers which emphasize novelty, practicality, usability, and availability of the systems and tools described.
Application, system, and tool papers need to be clearly marked in their title.
All submissions must be written in English and describe original, previously unpublished research, and must not simultaneously be
submitted for publication elsewhere. These restrictions do not apply to previously accepted workshop papers with a limited audience and/or
without archival proceedings.
Papers of the highest quality will be selected to be published in the journal of Theory and Practice of Logic Programming (TPLP), Cambridge University Press (CUP). In order to ensure the quality of the final version, papers may be subject to more than one round of refereeing (within the decision period).
The program committee may recommend some RPs to be published as Technical Communications (TCs). TCs will be published by Dagstuhl Publishing in the OpenAccess Series in Informatics (OASIcs). TCs must follow the OASIcs format (template available from ICLP's web page) and not exceed 14 pages excluding the bibliography and a short appendix (up to 5 more pages). TC's authors can also elect to convert their submissions into extended abstracts, of 2 or 3 pages, for inclusion in the OASIcs proceedings. This should allow authors to submit a long version elsewhere.
There is also a second submission round only for TCs. Submissions to this extra round must also follow the OASIcs format indicated above. RPs accepted as TCs do not need to be resubmitted to the TC extra round. Rejected RPs cannot be resubmitted as TCs.
All RPs and TCs will be presented during the conference. Authors of accepted papers will, by default, be automatically included in the list of ALP members, who will receive quarterly updates from the Logic Programming Newsletter at no cost.
Conference Organization
General Chairs:
- Maria Garcia de la Banda, Monash University, Australia
- Guido Tac, Monash University, Australia
Program Chairs:
- Ricardo Rocha, University of Porto, Portugal
- Tran Cao Son, New Mexico State University, USA
Workshop Chair:
- Enrico Pontelli, New Mexico State University, USA
Publicity Chair:
- Tommaso Urli, Australian National University, Australia
Sponsorship Chair:
- Maria Garcia de la Banda, Monash University, Australia
Doctoral Consortium Chair (joint event with CP and SAT):
- Neda Saeedloei, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA
- Christopher Mears, Monash University, Australia
Programming Contest Chairs:
- Paul Fodor, Stony Brook University, USA
- Graeme Gange, University of Melbourne, Australia
Web Presence:
- Tommaso Urli, Australian National University, Australia
Program Committee
TBA
Workshops
The ICLP 2017 program will include several workshops. They are perhaps the best places for the presentation of preliminary work, underdeveloped novel ideas, and new open problems to a wide and interested audience with opportunities for intensive discussions and project collaboration.
Doctoral Consortium
The Thirteen Doctoral Consortium (DC) on Logic Programming [this year being co-organized and taking place together with CP 2017 and SAT 2017] provides research students with the opportunity to present and discuss their research directions, and to obtain feedback from both peers and experts in the field. Accepted participants will receive partial financial support to attend the event and the main conference. The best paper from the DC will be given the opportunity to present in a session of the main ICLP conference. Doctoral consortium position papers, of between 10 and 14 pages, will also be published as TCs.
Conference Venue
The venue will be the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre. Melbourne is the second most populous city in Australia and the coastal capital of the south-eastern Australian state of Victoria. Set on the shores of beautiful Port Phillip Bay, Melbourne has been named the World's Most Liveable City for six years running and it is widely recognised as the cultural and culinary capital of Australia. It is a safe, creative and multi-cultural city full of exciting places to see, delicious foods to eat, and excellent events to experience; from the Arts precinct to the river bank parks and gardens to the buzzing city centre and the hidden thrills of Melbourne's laneways. It is also an air-hop away from breathtaking destinations like The Great Barrier Reef, Sydney and Uluru.
The Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre (MCEC) is located on the banks of the iconic Yarra River in Melbourne's South Wharf. Given its central location, it has a huge variety of accommodation close-by, with more than 6000 rooms within walking distance. MCEC is easily accessible by public transport, particularly as the Melbourne's city centre has a free tram zone that makes it easier for tourists to move around the city.
Related Events
Several other AI events will be held in Melbourne and other parts of Australia close to these dates, offering attendees a variety of choices for an extended itinerary. These events will include the International Conference on Principles and Practice of Constraint Programming (CP 2017) and the International Conference on Theory and Applications of Satisfiability Testing (SAT 2017), both co-located with ICLP 2017. The International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 2017), the Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AusAI 2017), the Australasian Conference on Data Mining (AusDM 2017), and the International Conference on Knowledge Science, Engineering, and Management (KSEM 2017) will all to be held in Melbourne one week before ICLP. The International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML 2017) will also be held in Sydney Australia shortly before ICLP 2017.
Sponsor
The conference is sponsored by the Association for Logic Programming
(ALP).
Financial Assistance
The Association for Logic Programming has funds to assist financially disadvantaged participants and, especially, students to enable them to attend the conference. Inquiries should be made to the general chairs.