# Call for Participation: Off the Beaten Track 2017

http://conf.researchr.org/track/POPL-2017/OBT-2017

21st January 2017

(co-located with POPL 2017, Paris, France)

## Registration

http://popl17.sigplan.org/attending/registration

  ** Early registration deadline: Saturday 17th Dec 2016 **

## Invited Speakers

  - Moa Johansson, Chalmers, Sweden
  - Alan Blackwell, Cambridge University, UK

## Background

Programming language researchers have the principles, tools,
algorithms and abstractions to solve all kinds of problems, in all
areas of computer science. However, identifying and evaluating new
problems, particularly those that lie outside the typical core PL
problems we all know and love, can be a significant challenge. This
workshop’s goal is to identify and discuss problems that do not often
show up in our top conferences, but where programming language
research can make a substantial impact. We hope fora like this will
increase the diversity of problems that are studied by PL researchers
and thus increase our community’s impact on the world.

While many workshops associated with POPL have become more like
mini-conferences themselves, this is an anti-goal for OBT. The
workshop will be informal and structured to encourage discussion. We
are at least as interested in problems as in solutions.

## Programme

09:00-10:00 Invited talk: Reasoning about Functional Programs: Exploring, Testing and Inductive Proofs.
            Moa Johanssen

10:00-10:30 coffee break

10:30-10:55 Can we machine-learn programming language semantics?
            Dan Ghica, Khulood Alyahya and Victor Patentasu
            10:55-11:20 How Far Apart Should Those Programs Be?
            Ugo Dal Lago
            11:20-11:45 Programming Quantum Annealers
            George Stelle and Scott Pakin
11:45-12:10 Understanding the POSIX Shell as a Programming Language
            Michael Greenberg

12:10-14:00 lunch

14:00-15:00 Invited Talk: Varieties of Programming Experience
            Alan Blackwell
15:00-15:25 Bootstrapping the next generation of mathematical social machines
            Ursula Martin, Alison Pease and Joe Corneli

15:30-16:00 coffee break

16:00-16:25 Designing extensible, domain-specific languages for mathematical diagrams Katherine Ye, Keenan Crane, Jonathan Aldrich and Joshua Sunshine
            16:25-16:50 Laziness Boxes You In
            Jose Manuel Calderon Trilla and Stephen Magill
            16:50-17:15 Programming with Epistemic Logic
            Markus Eger and Chris Martens
17:15-17:40 Preventing False Discoveries in Adaptive Data Analysis: a Programming Language approach
            Marco Gaboardi
            17:40-18:05 Running Incomplete Programs
            Ian Voysey, Cyrus Omar and Matthew Hammer
_______________________________________________
Haskell mailing list
Haskell@haskell.org
http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell

Reply via email to