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Current group: comp.constraints
Principles of Programming Languages 2005 (Long Beach CA, Jan 05)
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 | | From: | David Walker | | Subject: | Principles of Programming Languages 2005 (Long Beach CA, Jan 05) | | Date: | 28 Nov 2004 23:25:57 -0500 |
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 | POPL 2005 Call for Participation
32nd Annual ACM SIGPLAN - SIGACT Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages
Long Beach, California January 12-14, 2005 http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~dpw/popl/05/
Scope of the Conference
The annual Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages is a forum for the discussion of fundamental principles and important innovations in the design, definition, analysis, transformation, implementation and verification of programming languages, programming systems, and programming abstractions.
Important Dates
* Hotel reservation deadline: December 21, 2004 * Reduced fees deadline: December 30, 2004 (11:59 PM, EST USA) - Register at http://www.regmaster.com/popl2005.html * Main conference: January 12-14, 2005. * Affiliated events: January 10-11 and January 15, 2005
Invited Speakers
* Pat Hanrahan (Stanford University) * Rob Pike (Google): Interpreting the Data * Peter Selinger (University of Ottawa): Programming Languages for Quantum Computing
Location & Hotel
The POPL 2005 conference site is Hyatt Regency Long Beach, 200 South Pine Avenue, Long Beach, CA. Complete information concerning how to book rooms and travel to Long Beach may be found at the conference web site (http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~dpw/popl/05/). The Hyatt Regency is right next to a variety of entertainment areas, including the Shoreline Village, the Rainbow Harbor, and the Shoreline Marina, which offer sport fishing, boat rentals, personal boat rentals, shopping, great food and other diversions. For those wishing to take in some sun this January, one can walk east from the hotel, about a 1/4 mile, along the Shoreline Marina, to a large, sandy, public beach. In addition, the remarkable Aquarium of the Pacific, which houses more than 12,500 animals and offers the possibility of coming face-to-face or even touching the world's greatest predators, is only a 1/4 mile west. On Thursday January 13th, we will be having a tour and banquet on the Queen Mary ocean liner. Be sure to reserve your room by December 21st, 2004 and register for the conference by December 30th, 2004.
Program
Wednesday, Jan 12
8:30AM -- 9:30AM: Invited talk: Interpreting the Data, Rob Pike (Google)
10AM Session:
* Associated Types with Class - Manuel Chakravarty, Gabriele Keller, Simon Peyton-Jones, Simon Marlow * Environmental Acquisition Revisited - Richard Cobbe, Matthias Felleisen * Polymorphic Bytecode: Compositional Compilation for Java-like Languages - Davide Ancona, Ferrucio Damiani, Sophia Drossopoulou, Elena Zucca * A Simple Typed Intermediate Language for Object-Oriented Languages - Juan Chen, David Tarditi
1:30PM Session:
* Parametric Polymorphism for XML - Haruo Hosoya, Alain Frisch, Giuseppe Castagna * A Bisimulation for Type Abstraction and Recursion - Eijiro Sumii, Benjamin Pierce * A Syntactic Approach to Eta Equality in Type Theory - Healfdene Goguen * Slot Games: A Quantitative Model of Computation - Dan Ghica
4PM Session:
* Synthesis of Interface Specifications for Java Classes - Rajeev Alur, Pavol Cerny, P. Madhusudan, Wonhong Nam * Dynamic Partial-Order Reduction for Model Checking Software - Cormac Flanagan, Patrice Godefroid * Proof-Guided Underapproximation-Widening for Multi-Process Systems - Orna Grumberg, Flavio Lerda, Ofer Strichman, Michael Theobald * Transition Predicate Abstraction and Fair Termination - Andreas Podelski, Andrey Rybalchenko
6PM: Business meeting / PC report
Thursday, Jan 13
8:30AM: Invited talk: Programming Languages for Quantum Computing, Peter Selinger (University of Ottawa)
10AM Session:
* Communicating Quantum Processes - Simon Gay, Rajagopal Nagarajan * Downgrading Policies and Relaxed Noninterference - Peng Li, Steve Zdancewic * A Probabilistic Language Based Upon Sampling Functions - Sungwoo Park, Frank Pfenning, Sebastian Thrun * Mutatis Mutandis: Safe and Predictable Dynamic Software Updating - Gareth Stoyle, Michael Hicks, Gavin Bierman, Peter Sewell, Iulian Neamtiu
1:30PM Session:
* Transactors: A Programming Model for Maintaining Globally Consistent Distributed State in Unreliable Environments - John Field, Carlos Varela * Theoretical Foundations for Compensations in Flow Composition Languages - Roberto Bruni, Hernan Melgratti, Ugo Montanari * From Sequential Programs to Multi-Tier Applications by Program Transformation - Matthias Neubauer, Peter Thiemann * Combinators for Bi-Directional Tree Transformations: A Linguistic Approach to the View Update Problem - Nathan Foster, Michael Greenwald, Jonathan Moore, Benjamin Pierce, Alan Schmitt
4:30PM: Tour and conference dinner on the Queen Mary ocean liner
Friday, Jan 14
8:30AM: Invited talk, Pat Hanrahan (Stanford University)
10AM Session:
* Separation Logic and Abstraction - Matthew Parkinson, Gavin Bierman * Permission Accounting in Separation Logic - Richard Bornat, Cristiano Calcagno, Peter O'Hearn, Matthew Parkinson * Context Logic and Tree Update - Cristiano Calcagno, Philippa Gardner, Uri Zarfaty * Connecting Effects and Uniqueness with Adoption - John Tang Boyland, William Retert
1:30PM Session:
* A Semantics for Procedure-Local Heaps and its Abstractions - Noam Rinetzky, Jörg Bauer, Thomas Reps, Mooly Sagiv, Reinhard Wilhelm * Region-Based Shape Analysis with Tracked Locations - Brian Hackett, Radu Rugina * Precise Interprocedural Analysis using Random Interpretation - Sumit Gulwani, George Necula * Numeric Analysis of Array Operations - Denis Gopan, Thomas Reps, Mooly Sagiv
4PM Session:
* Scalable Error Detection using Boolean Satisfiability - Yichen Xie, Alex Aiken * Automated Soundness Proofs for Dataflow Analyses and Transformations via Local Rules - Sorin Lerner, Todd Millstein, Erika Rice, Craig Chambers * The Java Memory Model - Jeremy Manson, William Pugh, Sarita Adve
Program Chair:
Martín Abadi University of California, Santa Cruz Computer Science Department Santa Cruz, CA 95064 E-mail: abadi@cs.ucsc.edu
General Chair:
Jens Palsberg University of California, Los Angeles Computer Science Dept, 4531K Boelter Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095 Phone: 310-825-6320 Fax: 310-794-5057 E-mail: palsberg@ucla.edu Program Committee:
Martín Abadi, UC Santa Cruz (chair) Rastislav Bodik, UC Berkeley Perry Cheng, IBM (T.J. Watson Research Center) William Cook, UT Austin Michael Ernst, MIT Giorgio Ghelli, Università di Pisa Yossi Gil, Technion Ralf Hinze, Universität Bonn Martin Hofmann, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Alan Jeffrey, Bell Labs, Lucent / DePaul University Andrew Kennedy, Microsoft Research (Cambridge) Naoki Kobayashi, Tohoku University Julia Lawall, University of Copenhagen Andrew Myers, Cornell University Gordon Plotkin, University of Edinburgh François Pottier, INRIA (Rocquencourt) Sriram Rajamani, Microsoft Research (Redmond) John Reppy, University of Chicago Zhong Shao, Yale University Henny Sipma, Stanford University
Treasurer:
Manuel Fähndrich
Publicity:
David Walker
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