[TYPES/announce] 12th International Workshop on Rewriting Logic and its Applications (WRLA 2018): second CfP

vlad Vlad.Rusu at inria.fr
Mon Dec 4 08:01:43 EST 2017


======================== Call for Papers  =============================
                             WRLA 2018
The 12th International Workshop on Rewriting Logic and its Applications
An ETAPS 2018 satellite event - Thessaloniki, Greece - April 14-15 2018
=======================================================================

*NEW* Best WRLA 2018 paper award will be granted by Springer.

IMPORTANT DATES
     Submission deadline: January 5th 2018
     Workshop: April 14 -15, 2018.

AIMS AND SCOPE
Rewriting is a natural model of computation and an expressive semantic
framework for concurrency, parallelism, communication, and interaction.
It can be used for specifying a wide range of systems and languages in
various  application  domains. It  also has good  properties as a meta-
logical framework for representing logics. Several successful languages
based on rewriting (ASF+SDF, CafeOBJ, ELAN,Maude) have been designed and
implemented. The aim of  WRLA  is to bring together researchers with a
common interest in rewriting and its applications, and to give them the
opportunity  to  present  their  recent  work, discuss  future research
directions, and exchange ideas.

The topics of the workshop include, but are not limited to:

A. Foundations
     foundations and models of rewriting and rewriting logic, including
     termination, confluence  coherence and complexity
     unification, generalization, narrowing, and partial evaluation
     constrained rewriting and symbolic algebra
     graph rewriting
     tree automata
     rewriting strategies
     rewriting-based calculi and explicit substitution

B. Rewriting as a Logical and Semantic Framework
     uses of rewriting and rewriting logic as a logical framework,
     including deduction modulo
     uses of rewriting as a semantic framework for programming language
     semantics, rewriting semantics of concurrency models, distributed
     systems, and network protocols
     rewriting semantics of real-time, hybrid, and probabilistic systems
     uses of rewriting for compilation and language transformation

C. Rewriting Languages
     rewriting-based declarative languages
     type systems for rewriting
     implementation techniques
     tools supporting rewriting langages

D. Verification Techniques
     verification of confluence, termination, coherence, sufficient
     completeness, and related properties
     temporal, modal and reachability logics for verifying dynamic
     properties of rewrite theories
     explicit-state and symbolic model checking techniques for
     verification of rewrite theories
     rewriting-based theorem proving, including (co)inductive theorem
     proving
     rewriting-based constraint solving and satisfiability
     rewriting-semantics-based verification and analysis of programs

E. Applications
     applications in logic, mathematics, physics, and biology
     rewriting models of biology, chemistry, and membrane systems
     security specification and verification
     applications to distributed, network, mobile, and cloud computing
     specification and verification of real-time, hybrid, probabilistic,
     and cyber-physical systems
     specification and verification of critical systems
     applications to model-based software engineering
     applications to engineering and planning.

INVITED SPEAKERS
Santiago Escobar, University of Valencia, Spain
Hubert Garavel, Inria, Grenoble, France
Thomas Genet, University of Rennes, France

SUBMISSION
The program of the workshop will include regular papers, tool papers,
and work-in-progress presentations. The program will also contain
nvited talks, invited papers, and tutorials to be determined by the
program committee.

Regular papers must contain original contributions, be clearly written,
include appropriate references, and comparison with related work. They
must be unpublished and not submitted simultaneously for publication
elsewhere.

Tool papers have to present a new tool, a new tool component, or novel
extensions to an existing tool. They should provide a short description
of the theoretical foundations with relevant citations, emphasize the
design and implementation, and give a clear account of the tool’s
functionality. The described tools must be available via the web.

Work-in-progress papers present early-stage work or other types of
innovative or thought-provoking work related to the topics of the
workshop. The difference between work-in-progress and regular papers is
that work-in-progress submissions represent work that has not reached
yet a level of completion that would warrant the full refereed selection
process. We encourage researchers and practitioners to submit work-in-
progress papers as this provides a unique opportunity for sharing
valuable ideas, eliciting useful feedback on ongoing work, and fostering
discussions and collaborations among colleagues.

All submissions should be formatted according to the guidelines for
Springer LNCS papers, and should be submitted electronically using
EasyChair. Papers should be submitted electronically as a PDF file via
the Easychair system athttps://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wrla2018.

Regular and work-in-progress papers should not exceed 15 pages including
references. Tool papers should not exceed 6 pages including references
and may have an appendix of up to 4 additional pages with usage details
and tool demonstration.

PUBLICATION
All submissions will be evaluated by the program committee. Regular
papers, tool papers, and work-in-progress papers that are accepted will
be presented at the workshop and included in the pre-proceedings, which
will be available during the workshop. Following the tradition of the
last editions, regular papers, tool papers, and invited presentations
will be published as a volume in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Computer
Science (LNCS) series to be distributed after the workshop.

A special issue of JLAMP:the Journal of Logical and Algebraic Methods in
Programming will be devoted to extended versions of selected papers from
WRLA 2018.

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

     Kyungmin Bae, POSTECH, Korea
     Roberto Bruni, University of Pisa, Italy
     Stefan Ciobaca, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, Romania
     Francisco Durán, Universidad de Málaga, Spain
     Santiago Escobar, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Spain
     Maribel Fernández, King’s College London, UK
     Thomas Genet, IRISA/Université de Rennes 1, France
     Jürgen Giesl, RWTH Aachen, Germany
     Deepak Kapur, University of New Mexico, USA
     Helene Kirchner, INRIA, France
     Alexander Knapp, Universitat Augsburg, Germany
     Alberto Lluch Lafuente, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
     Dorel Lucanu, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, Romania
     Salvador Lucas, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Spain
     Narciso Martí-Oliet, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
     Ugo Montanari, University of Pisa, Italy
     Pierre-Etienne Moreau, Université de Lorraine, France
     Vivek Nigam, Federal University of Paraíba, Brasil
     Kazuhiro Ogata, JAIST, Japan
     Peter Ölveczky, University of Oslo, Norway
     Christophe Ringeissen, INRIA-Lorraine Nancy, France
     Grigore Rosu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
     Vlad Rusu, INRIA Lille Nord-Europe, France  (chair)
     Ralf Sasse, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
     Traian-Florin Serbanuta, University of Bucharest, Romania
     Mark-Oliver Stehr, SRI International, USA
     Carolyn Talcott, SRI International, USA
     Martin Wirsing, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany


CONTACT INFORMATION
For more information, please contact the organizers
   Vlad.Rusu at inria.fr
or visit the workshop's web page
   https://project.inria.fr/wrla18/



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