Fortaleza, Cearà, Brazil
March 16 - 20, 2008
Paper Submission deadline September 16, 2007
Notification of acceptance/rejection October 19, 2007
Constraints have emerged as the basis of a representational and computational paradigm that draws from many disciplines and can be brought to bear on many problem domains.
Back to topThe track is concerned with all aspects of computing with constraints including algorithms, applications, environments, languages, models, and systems. Contributions are welcome from any discipline concerned with constraints, including artificial intelligence, combinatorial algorithms, computational logic, concurrent computation, databases, discrete mathematics, operations research, programming languages, and symbolic computation. We also solicit papers from any domain employing constraints, including computational linguistics, configuration, decision support, design, diagnosis, graphics, hardware verification, molecular biology, planning, qualitative reasoning, real-time systems, resource allocation, robotics, scheduling, software engineering, temporal reasoning, vision, visualization, and user interfaces. Papers that bridge disciplines or combine theory and practice or discuss novel reasoning methods are especially welcome. A special attention is focused around the use of constraint technologies in the networking, wireless and internet fields.
Back to topWe would like to invite authors to submit papers on research on constraint solving and programming, with particular emphasis on assessing the current state of the art and identifying future directions.
Preliminary guidelines:
Submissions should be properly anonymized to facilitate blind
reviewing: papers being submitted should not list the authors,
affiliations or addresses on the first page and authors are also
encouraged to take care throughout the entire document to minimise
references that may reveal the identity of the authors or
institution. The body of each paper should not exceed 4,000
words. Papers failing to comply with length limitations risk immediate
rejection. At least three reviewers will be assigned to each
submission to the track. Accepted papers are published by ACM in both
printed form and CD-ROM; they are also available on the Web through
the ACM Digital Library. Once accepted, papers must fit within five
(5) two column pages (please check the author kit on the main SAC
website: the format is usually the format used in the ACM templates),
with the option (at additional expense) to add three (3) more pages.
A second set of selected papers, which did not get accepted as full
papers, will be accepted as posters and will be published as extended
2-page abstracts in the symposium proceedings.
Authors of accepted papers must be prepared to sign a copyright statement and must pay the registration fee and guarantee that their paper will be presented at the conference.
To submit a paper, author need to strictly follow guidelines at http://www.acm.org/conferences/sac/sac2008/
We strongly suggest to use for submission the available camera ready templates, and adhere to the 5 page limitation.
After completing the submission, please send also an email to:
stefano.bistarelli@iit.cnr.it
The body of the email should include the title of the paper, the
author(s) name(s) and affiliation(s), and the address (including
e-mail, telephone, and fax) to which correspondence should be sent.
The subject of the email should be "SAC2008 constraint track
submission" .
Registration is required for paper and poster inclusion in the Conference Proceedings, and for event attendance.
Back to topThe schedule of important dates for the track is as follows:
Roman Bartak, Charles University, Czech Republic
Stefano Bistarelli, Università degli studi "G. D'Annunzio", Pescara, Italy and IIT-CNR, Pisa, Italy
Lucas Bordeaux, Microsoft Research, U.K.
Sebastian Brand, NICTA, Australia
Carlos Castro, UTFSM Valparaiso, Chile
Martine Ceberio, University of Texas at El Paso
Berthe Y. Choueiry, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Yves Colombani, Dash Associates Ltd., U.K.
Bart Demoen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Filippo Focacci, ILOG, France
Thom Frühwirth, Universität Ulm, Germany
Narendra Jussien, Ecole des Mines de Nantes/LINA, France
Tetsuo Ida, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Arnaud Lallouet, University of Orléans, France
Jimmy Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Ian Miguel, St. Andrew's University, Scotland
Eric Monfroy, UTFSM, Chile and LINA, University of Nantes, France
Carlos Alberto Olarte, LIX, École Polytechnique, France
Barry O'Sullivan, University College Cork, Ireland
Frédéric Saubion, LERIA, Université d'Angers, France
Kazunori Ueda, Waseda University, Japan
József Váncza, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
Roland Yap, National University of Singapore, Republic of Singapore
Peter Zoeteweij, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Back to top