FIRST CALL FOR SHORT COMMUNICATIONS AND SOFTWARE PRESENTATIONS
ISSAC 2024
International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic Computation
July 16-19, 2024
Raleigh, NC, USA
https://www.issac-conference.org/2024/
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The International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic Computation is the
premier conference for research in symbolic computation and computer
algebra. ISSAC 2024 will be the 49th meeting in the series, which started
in 1966 and has been held annually since 1981. The conference presents a
range of invited talks, tutorials, short communications (posters), software
demonstrations, and vendor exhibits with a centerpiece of contributed
research papers.
ISSAC 2024 will be held on July 16-19 2024 in Raleigh, NC, USA.
The short communications session at ISSAC is a venue to announce early
research results or ongoing projects that might not yet be complete. Short
communications reporting on recent work published, accepted, or submitted
elsewhere are also
welcome (with original publications clearly referenced). The short
communication submission will be in the form of an extended abstract (see
details below). At the conference, short communications will be presented
in the form of a poster session. Authors are encouraged to create their
posters on a single large A0 sheet.
The software presentation sessions at ISSAC are opportunities to
demonstrate and communicate about new implementations of algorithms in
symbolic and algebraic computation. Of relevance are presentations for new
software, new packages, or new developments that present some originality
or improved performance compared to the state of the art.
Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract in PDF format of no more
than 4 pages. The abstracts will be reviewed by the short communications
and software committees and relevant experts when needed. The review
criteria are content, originality, style, and relevance. The accepted short
communication and software abstracts will be printed and distributed at the
conference as well as published in an upcoming issue of the ACM SIGSAM
Communications in Computer Algebra.
Important Dates
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Software presentations:
Submission software presentation: April 16th, 2024, 23:59 (anywhere on
Earth)
Notification of acceptance/rejection: May 7th, 2024
Final version (.tex) due: June 11th, 2024
Short Communications:
Abstract submission (.pdf): May 14th, 2024, 23:59
(anywhere on Earth)
Notification of acceptance/rejection: May 24th, 2024
Final version (.tex) due: June 11th, 2024
Submissions
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The abstract should have no more than 4 pages using the SIGSAM LaTeX style
and the
CCA templates which are available here:
https://www.sigsam.org/cca/
Authors of accepted contributions are expected to present their work at the
symposium.
Short Communications:
Please submit via EasyChair at:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=issac24posters
Software presentations:
Please submit via EasyChair at:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=issac24software
Topics
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All areas of computer algebra and symbolic mathematical computation are of
interest. These include, but are not limited to:
Algorithmic aspects:
* Exact and symbolic linear, polynomial and differential algebra
* Symbolic-numeric, homotopy, perturbation and series methods
* Computational algebraic geometry, polynomial and semialgebraic
optimization
* Computational group theory and number theory, quantifier elimination and
logic
* Computer arithmetic
* Summation, recurrence equations, integration, solution of ODEs & PDEs
* Symbolic methods in other areas of pure and applied mathematics
* Complexity of algebraic algorithms and algebraic complexity
Software aspects:
* Design of symbolic computation packages and systems
* Language design and type systems for symbolic computation
* Data representation
* Considerations for modern hardware
* Algorithm implementation and performance tuning
* Mathematical user interfaces
* Use with systems such as digital libraries, courseware, simulation and
optimization, automated theorem-proving, computer-aided design, and
automatic differentiation
Application aspects:
* Applications that stretch the current limits of computer algebra
algorithms or systems, use computer algebra in new areas or new ways, or
apply it in situations with broad impact.
Invited Speakers
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Elizabeth Gross, University of Hawai`i at Mānoa, USA
Erich L. Kaltofen, North Carolina State University and Duke University, USA
Daniel S. Roche, United States Naval Academy, USA
Tutorial Speakers
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Diego Cifuentes, Georgia Tech, USA
Hoon Hong, North Carolina State University, USA
Evelyne Hubert, INRIA Méditerranée, France
Conference Organization
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General Chair:
Jonathan Hauenstein, University of Notre Dame, USA
Short Communications Committee
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Marianne Akian, INRIA Saclay Île-de-France and CMAP, France
Michael Burr, Clemson University, USA
Margaret Regan (Chair), College of the Holy Cross, USA
AmirHosein Sadeghimanesh, Coventry University, UK
Hal Schenck, Auburn University, USA
Software Presentation Committee
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Silviana Amethyst (Chair), University of Wisconsin Eau Claire, USA
Paul Breiding, University of Osnabrück, Germany
Jeroen Hanselman, Technical University of Kaiserslautern, Germany
Kisun Lee, Clemson University, USA
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