From: "François Pottier" <francois.pottier@inria.fr>
To: caml users <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: [Caml-list] First call for talk proposals: Higher-Order Programming with Effects, HOPE 2017
Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2017 16:52:29 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4a368296-a116-4a7c-bfab-50cab18ceef0@inria.fr> (raw)
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CALL FOR TALK PROPOSALS
HOPE 2017
The 6th ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on
Higher-Order Programming with Effects
September 3, 2017
Oxford, United Kingdom
(the day before ICFP 2017)
http://icfp17.sigplan.org/track/hope-2017-papers
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The HOPE workshop series are intended to bring together researchers
interested
in the design, semantics, implementation, and verification of higher-order
effectful programs. They are informal, consisting of invited talks,
contributed talks on work in progress, and open-ended discussion sessions.
They are dedicated to John Reynolds, whose work is an inspiration to us all.
The 6th ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Higher-Order Programming with Effects will
take place on Sunday, September 3, 2017, that is, the day before ICFP 2017,
in Oxford, United Kingdom.
# Goals of the Workshop
A recurring theme in many papers at ICFP, and in the research of many ICFP
attendees, is the interaction of higher-order programming with various kinds
of effects: storage effects, I/O, control effects, concurrency, etc. While
effects are of critical importance in many applications, they also make code
harder to build, maintain, and reason about. Higher-order languages (both
functional and object-oriented) provide a variety of abstraction
mechanisms to
help "tame" or "encapsulate" effects (e.g. monads, ADTs, ownership types,
typestate, first-class events, transactions, Hoare Type Theory, session
types,
substructural and region-based type systems), and a number of different
semantic models and verification technologies have been developed in
order to
codify and exploit the benefits of this encapsulation (e.g. bisimulations,
step-indexed Kripke logical relations, higher-order separation logic, game
semantics, various modal logics). But there remain many open problems,
and the
field is highly active.
The goal of the HOPE workshop is to bring researchers from a variety of
different backgrounds and perspectives together to exchange new and exciting
ideas concerning the design, semantics, implementation, and verification of
higher-order effectful programs.
We want HOPE to be as informal and interactive as possible. The program will
thus involve a combination of invited talks, contributed talks about work in
progress, and open-ended discussion sessions. There will be no published
proceedings, but participants will be invited to submit working documents,
talk slides, etc., to be made available online.
# Call for Talk Proposals
We solicit proposals for contributed talks. We recommend preparing proposals
of at most 2 pages, in either plain text or PDF format. However, we will
accept longer proposals or submissions to other conferences, under the
understanding that PC members are only expected to read the first two
pages of
such longer submissions. When submitting talk proposals, authors should
specify how long a talk the speaker wishes to give. By default, contributed
talks will be 30 minutes long, but proposals for shorter or longer talks
will
also be considered. Speakers may also submit supplementary material (e.g. a
full paper, talk slides) if they desire, which PC members are free (but not
expected) to read.
We are interested in talks on all topics related to the interaction of
higher-order programming and computational effects. Talks about work in
progress are particularly encouraged. If you have any questions about the
relevance of a particular topic, please contact the PC chairs, François
Pottier (francois.pottier@inria.fr) and Aleks Nanevski
(aleks.nanevski@imdea.org).
# Important Dates
* Deadline for talk proposals: June 1st, 2017 (Thursday)
* Notification of acceptance: July 1st, 2017 (Saturday)
* Workshop: September 3, 2017 (Sunday)
# Submission Link
The submission website is https://icfp-hope17.hotcrp.com/ .
# Workshop Organization
Program Co-Chairs:
François Pottier (Inria Paris)
Aleks Nanevski (IMDEA Software Institute)
Program Committee:
Edwin Brady University of St Andrews
Pierre-Évariste Dagand LIP6/CNRS
Atsushi Igarashi Kyoto University
Robert Krebbers Delft University of Technology
Vivek Nigam Federal University of Paraíba
Matija Pretnar University of Ljubljana
Azalea Raad Imperial College London
Aseem Rastogi Microsoft Research
Filip Sieczkowski University of Wrocław
Niki Vazou University of Maryland
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