Studies in Logic: Mathematical Logic and Foundations, Vol. 12
College Publications 2008, 308 pages
ISBN 978-1-904987-56-7
In recent years there has been an increasing use of logical methods and significant new developments have been spawned in several areas of computer science, ranging from artificial intelligence and software engineering to agent-based systems and the semantic web. In the investigation and application of logical methods there is a tension between:
Second-order logics are very expressive and allow us to represent domain knowledge with ease, but there is a high price to pay for the expressiveness. Most second-order logics are incomplete and highly undecidable. It is the quantifiers which bind relation symbols that make second-order logics computationally unfriendly. It is therefore desirable to eliminate these second-order quantifiers, when this is mathematically possible; and often it is. If second-order quantifiers are eliminable we want to know under which conditions, we want to understand the principles and we want to develop methods for second-order quantifier elimination. This book provides the first comprehensive, systematic and uniform account of the state-of-the-art of second-order quantifier elimination in classical and non-classical logics. It covers the foundations, it discusses in detail existing second-order quantifier elimination methods, and it presents numerous examples of applications and non-standard uses in different areas. These include:
The book is intended for anyone interested in the theory and application of logics in computer science and artificial intelligence.
Further information can be found at http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~schmidt/publications/GabbaySchmidtSzalas08.html
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The 10th Asian Logic Conference will be held at Kobe University, Kobe, Japan during September 1-6, 2008.
http://kurt.scitec.kobe-u.ac.jp/ALC10/
DEADLINE: May 31, 2008
Abstracts of contributed talks must follow the Rules for Abstracts of the ASL (http://www.aslonline.org/), and should be written in ENGLISH.
They should be submitted as email attachments BOTH as a LaTeX file AND as a pdf file to alc10submit@kurt.scitec.kobe-u.ac.jp by the deadline of May 31, 2008.
Abstracts of contributed talks submitted by ASL members will be published in The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic.
Limited student support will be available and announced in future versions of this call.
The Asian Logic Conference has occurred every three years in the Asia-Pacific region since 1981, Singapore. The purpose of the conference is to facilitate interaction between researchers interested in mathematical logic, logic in computer science, and philosophical logics. It aims at promoting activities in mathematical logic in the Asia-Pacific so that logicians both from within Asia and elsewhere would get together and exchange information and ideas.
Tutorials will be given by P. Cholak, G. Hjorth and B. Kim.
Plenary invited speakers include: J. Avigad, J. Moore, K. Terui and Y. Yang.
Three special sessions are planned with speakers in parentheses:
The Program Committee:
J. Brendle, C. T. Chong, R. Downey, Q. Feng, H. Kikyo, H. Ono, and T. Arai (Chair).
The Local Organizing Committee includes:
M. Banbara, H. Minami, I. Nagasaka, A. Suzuki, and M. Kikuchi (Chair).
For further information, visit http://kurt.scitec.kobe-u.ac.jp/ALC10/.
AiML-2008
ADVANCES in MODAL LOGIC
9-12 September 2008, LORIA, Nancy, France
http://aiml08.loria.fr
DEADLINE: 31 March 2008
Advances in Modal Logic is an initiative aimed at presenting an up-to-date picture of the state of the art in modal logic and its many applications. The initiative consists of a conference series together with volumes based on the conferences.
AiML-2008 is the seventh conference in the series.
We invite submission on all aspects of modal logics, including the following:
Papers on related subjects will also be considered.
Invited speakers at AiML-2008 will include the following:
In a change from previous AiML's, there will be two types of paper:
(1) Full papers for publication and presentation at the conference.
(2) Abstracts for short presentation only.
Both types of paper should be submitted electronically using the submission page at http://www.easychair.org/AiML08/.
The online submission system will be opened a few weeks before the submission deadline of 31 March 2008.
These will be published by College Publications in a volume to be made available at the meeting. Authors are invited to submit for review a full paper, not submitted elsewhere. It should be at most 15 pages plus optionally a technical appendix of up to 5 pages, together with a plain-text abstract of say 100-200 words.
To appear in the conference volume, papers must be prepared in LaTeX using the style files to be provided at http://aiml08.loria.fr. At least one author of each accepted paper must register for and attend the conference to present the paper.
These should at most 5 pages. They may describe preliminary results, work in progress etc., and will be subject to light review. They may be made available at the conference, and authors should indicate if they would like to make a short presentation of their abstract of up to 15 minutes.
Carlos Areces
LORIA, Nancy
carlos.areces(at)loria.fr
Rob Goldblatt
Victoria University of Wellington
rob.goldblatt(at)mcs.vuw.ac.nz
Patrick Blackburn
LORIA, Nancy
patrick.blackburn(at)loria.fr
Submission deadline: 31 March 2008
Acceptance notification: 31 May 2008
Final version of full papers due: 30 June 2008
Conference: 9-12 September 2008
Advances in Modal Logic 2008 will be held at LORIA (Laboratoire Lorrain de Recherche en Informatique et ses Applications) in Nancy, in the Lorraine, in the east of France.
Information about AiML-2008 will be available at the conference website: http://aiml08.loria.fr.
E-mail enquiries should be directed to the local organizer or the program co-chairs.