Monday, January 1, 2024

[DMANET] DCFS 2024: 2nd CFP

                           CALL FOR PAPERS
                              DCFS 2024
International Conference on Descriptional Complexity of Formal Systems
                        Santa Clara University
                          June 25 - 27, 2024

               https://sites.google.com/scu.edu/dcfs24
                          dcfs2024@gmail.com

               Paper submission deadline: March 1, 2024
                  Author notification: April 2, 2024
                Camera-ready deadline: April 11, 2024


The 26th edition of DCFS is organized by the Department of Mathematics
and Computer Science of Santa Clara University, USA and by the IFIP
Working Group 1.02 "Descriptional Complexity".

TOPICS

Original research papers concerning the descriptional complexity of
formal systems and structures (and its applications) are sought. Topics
include, but are not limited to:

  Automata, grammars, languages and other formal systems; various modes
of  operations and complexity measures.

  Succinctness of description of objects, state-explosion-like phenomena.

  Circuit complexity of Boolean functions and related measures.

  Size complexity of formal systems.

  Structural complexity of formal systems.

  Trade-offs between computational models and mode of operation.

  Applications of formal systems -- for instance in software and
hardware testing, in dialogue systems,  in systems modeling or in
modeling natural languages -- and their complexity constraints.

  Co-operating formal systems.

  Size or structural complexity of formal systems for modeling natural
languages.

  Complexity aspects related to the combinatorics of words.

  Descriptional complexity in resource-bounded or structure-bounded
environments.

  Structural complexity as related to descriptional complexity.

  Frontiers between decidability and undecidability.

  Universality and reversibility.

  Nature-motivated (bio-inspired) architectures and unconventional
models of computing.

  Blum Static (Kolmogorov/Chaitin) complexity, algorithmic information.


PROGRAM COMMITTEE

    Henning Bordihn (University of Potsdam, Germany), co-chair

    Pascal Caron (University of Rouen, France)

    Szilárd Fazekas (Akita University, Japan)

    Yo-Sub Han (Yonsei University, Republic of Korea)

    Galina Jirásková (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia)

    Stavros Konstantinidis (Saint Mary's University, Canada)

    Martin Kutrib (University of Giessen, Germany)

    Ian McQuillan (University of Saskatchewan, Canada)

    Timothy Ng (University of Chicago, USA)

    Alexander Okhotin (St. Petersburg State University, Russia)

    Giovanni Pighizzini (University of Milan, Italy)

    Chris Pollett (San Jose State University, USA)

    Luca Prigioniero (Loughborough University, UK)

    Bala Ravikumar (Sonoma State University, USA)

    Rogérior Reis (University of Porto, Portugal)

    Kai Salomaa (Queen's University, Canada)

    Shinnosuke Seki (The University of Electro-Communications, Japan)

    Howard Straubing (Boston College, USA)

    Nicholas Tran (Santa Clara University, USA), co-chair

    György Vaszil (University of Debrecen, Hungary)

    Hsu-Chun Yen (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)   Program Committee

    Henning Bordihn (University of Potsdam, Germany), co-chair

    Pascal Caron (University of Rouen, France)

    Szilárd Fazekas (Akita University, Japan)

    Yo-Sub Han (Yonsei University, Republic of Korea)

    Galina Jirásková (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia)

    Stavros Konstantinidis (Saint Mary's University, Canada)

    Martin Kutrib (University of Giessen, Germany)

    Ian McQuillan (University of Saskatchewan, Canada)

    Timothy Ng (University of Chicago, USA)

    Alexander Okhotin (St. Petersburg State University, Russia)

    Giovanni Pighizzini (University of Milan, Italy)

    Chris Pollett (San Jose State University, USA)

    Luca Prigioniero (Loughborough University, UK)

    Bala Ravikumar (Sonoma State University, USA)

    Rogérior Reis (University of Porto, Portugal)

    Kai Salomaa (Queen's University, Canada)

    Shinnosuke Seki (The University of Electro-Communications, Japan)

    Howard Straubing (Boston College, USA)

    Nicholas Tran (Santa Clara University, USA), co-chair

    György Vaszil (University of Debrecen, Hungary)

    Hsu-Chun Yen (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)


PAPER SUBMISSION

Submissions to DCFS must not exceed 12 pages in Springer-Verlag's
Lecture Notes style including bibliography. If the authors believe that
more details are essential to substantiate the main claims, they may
include a clearly marked appendix that will be read at the discretion of
the program committee. Simultaneous submissions of papers to any other
conference with published proceedings or submitting previously published
papers is not allowed.  Papers should be submitted electronically as a
PDF document to

https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dcfs24.

After logging in to your EasyChair account, select the "New Submission"
menu item on the top of the page.  If you do not have an EasyChair
account, follow the instructions on the login page. The proceedings will
be published by Springer-Verlag in the series Lecture Notes in Computer
Science. In addition, a special issue of Journal of Automata, Languages,
and Combinatorics will be devoted to revised and extended versions of
selected papers of the conference.

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