ADG 2021
Thirteenth International Conference on Automated Deduction in Geometry
Online, September 15-17, 2021
https://www.risc.jku.at/conferences/adg2021
Overview:
ADG is a forum to exchange ideas and views, to present research results
and progress, and to demonstrate software tools at the intersection
between geometry and automated deduction. The conference is held every
two years. The previous editions of ADG were held in Nanning in 2018,
Strasbourg in 2016, Coimbra in 2014, Edinburgh in 2012, Munich in 2010,
Shanghai in 2008, Pontevedra in 2006, Gainesville in 2004, Hagenberg in
2002, Zurich in 2000, Beijing in 1998, and Toulouse in 1996. The 13th
edition, ADG 2021, will be held online in September
15-17, 2021.
Scope:
Relevant topics include (but are not limited to):
- polynomial algebra, invariant and coordinate-free methods;
- probabilistic, synthetic, and logic approaches, techniques for
automated geometric reasoning from discrete mathematics,
combinatorics, and numerics;
- interactive theorem proving in geometry;
- symbolic and numeric methods for geometric computation, geometric
constraint solving, automated generation/reasoning and manipulation
with diagrams;
- design and implementation of geometry software, automated theorem
provers, special-purpose tools, experimental studies;
- applications of ADG in mechanics, geometric modelling, CAGD/CAD,
computer vision, robotics and education.
Special Focus:
This edition of ADG will have additional special focus topic: links
between automated deduction in geometry and robotics.
Submission Guidelines:
- We invite submission of extended abstracts (3 to 12 pages).
- The submissions abstracts must address the following aspects
explicitly.
- Problem: What is the problem/question/objective?
- Motivation: Why do we work on the problem?
What is the importance?
- State of the Art: What has been done already on the problem?
- Contribution: What is the main original contribution?
- Main Idea: What is the main idea underlying the contribution?
- The submissions should follow the standard Springer LNCS Proceedings
format.
- Extended abstracts are to be submitted as PDF via EasyChair (at
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=adg2021).
- If you have any problems with the submission of your abstract, or
questions concerning ADG 2021 or EasyChair, please contact
adg2021@easychair.org.
Refereeing and Publication:
- The submitted extended abstracts will be reviewed by the Program
Committee.
- Informal proceedings (of extended abstracts accepted for presentation)
in printed form will be available at the conference. Also, informal
proceedings in digital form will be available from the conference web
page. The authors are free to submit their abstracts for publication
in other forums.
- The authors of extended abstracts accepted for presentation at the
conference will be invited to submit their full papers for publication
in formal postproceedings of ADG 2021 after the conference. (The
postproceedings of ADG 1996, ADG 1998, ADG 2000, ADG 2002, and ADG 2004,
ADG 2006, ADG 2010, ADG 2012 and ADG 2014 appeared as LNAI 1360, LNAI
1669, LNAI 2061, LNAI 2930, LNAI 3763, LNAI 4869, LNCS 6877, LNAI 7993
and LNAI 9201 respectively).
- All participants are encouraged to bring along posters on their
geometric work (irrespective of whether it is to be presented at the
conference) for display during ADG 2021.
Important Dates:
-
May 31 June 7 (extended deadline): extended abstracts submission
- July 7: notification of acceptance
- August 15: final version due
- August 15: early registration
- September 15-17: ADG 2021
Invited Speakers:
- Gilles Dowek (INRIA, France)
- Manfred Husty (University of Innsbruck, Austria)
- Christoph Koutschan (Johann Radon Institute, Austria)
- Pedro Quaresma (University of Coimbra, Portugal)
- Wolfgang Windsteiger (RISC, Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
General Chair:
- Zoltán Kovács (JKU Linz School of Education, Austria)
Program Committee Chair:
- Predrag Janičić (University of Belgrade, Serbia)
Program Committee:
- Armin Biere (FMV, Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
- Francisco Botana (University of Vigo, Spain)
- Jose Capco (RISC, Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
- Xiaoyu Chen (Beihang University, China)
- Thierry Dana-Picard (Jerusalem College of Technology, Israel)
- Jacques Fleuriot (University of Edinburgh, UK)
- Fadoua Ghourabi (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
- Georg Grasegger (The Johann Radon Institute for Computational and
Applied Mathematics, Austria)
- Markus Hohenwarter (JKU Linz School of Education, Austria)
- Tetsuo Ida (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
- Julien Narboux (University of Strasbourg, France)
- Walther Neuper (University of Technology, Graz, Austria)
- Pavel Pech (University of South Bohemia, České Budějovice, Czechia)
- Martin Pfurner (University of Innsbruck, Austria)
- Pedro Quaresma (University of Coimbra, Portugal)
- Tomás Recio (Universidad Antonio de Nebrija, Spain)
- Pascal Schreck (University of Strasbourg, France)
- Wolfgang Schreiner (RISC, Johannes Kepler University, Austria)
- Ileana Streinu (Smith College, USA)
- Dingkang Wang (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
- Dongming Wang (Beihang University and Guangxi University for
Nationalities, China)
- Jing Yang (Guangxi University for Nationalities, China)
|