CCC 2011: Call for Papers
Purpose and Scope
The conference seeks original research papers in all areas of
computational complexity theory, studying the absolute and relative
power of computational models under resource constraints. Typical models
include deterministic, nondeterministic, randomized, and quantum models;
uniform and non-uniform models; Boolean,
algebraic, and continuous models. Typical resource constraints involve
time, space, randomness, program size, input queries, communication, and
entanglement; worst-case as well as average-case. Other, more
specific, topics include: probabilistic and interactive proof systems,
inapproximability, proof complexity, descriptive complexity, and
complexity-theoretic aspects of cryptography and learning theory. The
conference also encourages results from other areas of computer science
and mathematics motivated by computational complexity theory.
Location and Dates
The 2011 conference will be part of FCRC 2011 and will be held from June 8th to June 10th, 2011, in San Jose, California. The Federated Computing Research Conference (FCRC) is a bringing together of several related conferences in one place and will take place from June 4th to June 11th.
See the navigation list for the local arrangements site and to find travel information.
Sponsors
The conference is sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee for Mathematical Foundations of Computing in cooperation with the ACM Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory (SIGACT) and the European Association of Theoretical Computer Science (EATCS).
Submissions
Papers must be submitted electronically to the submissions server, which is now available. A submission must be received by December 8th, 2010, 19:59 EST, for consideration. Notification of acceptance will be sent by February 18th, 2011, and final copies will be due by March 11th, 2011.
Format
A submission consists of a title page (containing the title, author names and affiliations, and an abstract), a body of no more than 10 pages, a bibliography, and possible appendices. The paper should be in single-column format, use at least 11-point font, and have standard margins and spacing between lines. Submissions deviating from these guidelines risk summary rejection. In the body of the paper (i) explain what the major contributions are, (ii) convey why they are interesting, (iii) tell how they relate to prior work, and (iv) present the main ideas behind them. Use appendices to substantiate technical claims. The appendices will be read at the discretion of the Program Committee.
Exclusivity
Material which has been previously published in a journal or another
conference proceedings, or which is scheduled for publication prior to
July 2011 will not be considered for acceptance. Simultaneous
submission of the same or essentially the same material to a journal or
another conference with published proceedings (including
STOC) is not allowed. Authors are encouraged to submit their
papers to the Electronic Colloquium on
Computational Complexity.
Presenting the work
Authors of accepted papers are expected to present their work at the conference. The program committee will determine time allocations for presentations (between 15 and 45 minutes). Conference proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society. Publication in the conference proceedings does not preclude subsequent journal publication.
Ronald V. Book Prize for Best Student Paper
This award will be given to the best paper written solely by one or more students. An abstract is eligible if all authors are full-time students at the time of submission. This should be indicated in the submission registration message or cover letter. The program committee may decline to make the award or may split it among several papers.
Best Paper Award
This award will be given to the best paper submitted to the conference. This will be awarded by the program committee. The program committee may decline to make the award or may split it among several papers.
Program Committee
- Albert Atserias, UPC Barcelona
- Richard Beigel, Temple U.
- Dmitry Gavinsky, NEC Labs, US
- Tali Kaufman, Bar-Ilan U. and Weizmann Inst.
- Johannes Koebler, Humboldt U.
- Toni Pitassi, U. of Toronto
- Prasad Raghavendra, Georgia Tech
- Anup Rao, U. of Washington
- Ran Raz, Weizmann Institute
- Omer Reingold (chair), MSR
- Nitin Saxena, Hausdorff Center, Bonn
Postable version
A mini-poster version of the CFP is available as a PDF.
Questions?
If you have any questions, please contact Richard Beigel, the publicity chair.