Hi,

We confess: Our plan has always been to extend the submission
deadlines (for abstracts and papers) for ACL2 2018 by one week.  We
are making that extension now.  Thus, the new deadlines are as
follows.

Abstracts submission:   July  7, 2018
Paper submission:       July 14, 2018

We do not anticipate any further deadline extensions, since the
reviewers need time to do their work.

Regards,
Shilpi Goel and Matt Kaufmann
Co-chairs, ACL2 2018
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Second Call for Papers:
                              ACL2 2018
        15th International Workshop on the ACL2 Theorem Prover
                         and Its Applications

                 November 5-6, 2018, Austin, Texas, USA

  http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/workshop-2018/index.html

 The 2018 ACL2 Workshop will be held in Austin, Texas, USA, and it is
 co-located with FMCAD (http://www.fmcad.org/FMCAD18).  We invite
 users of ACL2, users of other theorem provers, and persons interested
 in the applications of theorem proving technology to attend.

 IMPORTANT DATES:

 Abstract submission:   June 30, 2018
 Paper submission:      July 7, 2018
 Author notification:   August 25, 2018
 Camera ready:          September 25, 2018
 Workshop:              November 5-6, 2018

 AIMS AND SCOPE:

 The ACL2 Workshop series is the major technical forum for users of
 the ACL2 theorem proving system to present research related to the
 ACL2 theorem prover and its applications.  ACL2 is an
 industrial-strength automated reasoning system, the latest in the
 Boyer-Moore family of theorem provers.  The 2005 ACM Software System
 Award was awarded to Boyer, Kaufmann, and Moore for their work in
 ACL2 and the other theorem provers in the Boyer-Moore family.

 ACL2-2018 is a two-day workshop to be held in Austin, Texas, USA, on
 November 5-6, 2018, immediately after FMCAD
 (http://www.fmcad.org/FMCAD18), on the University of Texas campus.
 It is the 15th in the series of ACL2 workshops, which occur
 approximately every 18 months.  The workshop will feature technical
 papers as well as rump sessions that discuss ongoing research.

 There will be three invited keynote talks, given by:

 Sandip Ray, University of Florida at Gainesville
 Alastair Reid, ARM
 Sol Swords, Centaur Technology

 We invite submissions of papers on any topic related to ACL2 and its
 applications, and we strongly encourage submissions related to other
 theorem provers or formal methods that are of interest to the ACL2
 community.  Suggested topics include but are not limited to new
 results in the following areas.

     * Software or hardware verification with ACL2
     * Formalizations of mathematics in ACL2
     * Libraries and tools for ACL2
     * User interfaces for ACL2
     * Novel uses of ACL2
     * Experiences with ACL2 in the classroom
     * Reports of and proposals for improvements of ACL2
     * Comparisons with other theorem provers
     * Comparisons with other programming or specification languages
     * Challenge problems and their solutions
     * Foundational issues related to ACL2
     * Implementations connecting ACL2 with other systems

 PAPER SUBMISSIONS:

 Submissions must be made electronically in PDF format.  Submissions
 should be prepared in the EPTCS templates, available from
 http://style.eptcs.org <http://style.eptcs.org/>, and submitted via
 EasyChair.  See the ACL2 2018 website for details.

 The ACL2 Workshop accepts both long papers (up to sixteen pages) and
 extended abstracts (up to two pages).  Both categories of papers will
 require short abstracts to be submitted by the "Abstract submission"
 deadline and will be refereed by at least two members of the program
 committee.  Accepted submissions in both categories will be included
 in the final workshop proceedings, although speaking slots will be
 shorter for extended abstracts.  At least one author of each accepted
 submission must register for the workshop and give a presentation
 summarizing the paper's results.

 Extended abstracts should contain at least one or two references so
 someone can pursue the abstract topic.  Like long papers, extended
 abstracts must describe work that has already been done -- it is not
 for ideas for future work.  To discuss future work, we will have a
 rump session, and we will later appeal for those topics.

 One of the main advantages of the ACL2 Workshop is that attendees are
 already knowledgeable about ACL2, its syntax, its basic commands, and
 the art of writing models in it.  So authors may assume that readers
 have this familiarity.  The workshop proceedings will be published as
 a volume of Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
 (EPTCS).  Long papers will be published as PDFs, and extended
 abstracts will be published as HTML snippets.  Please see the EPTCS
 copyright page (http://copyright.eptcs.org/) for a discussion of
 licensing.  Please also see the EPTCS LaTeX style file and formatting
 instructions (http://style.eptcs.org).

 Many papers presented at the workshop will describe interactions with
 the theorem prover.  Authors of such papers are required to provide
 ACL2 script files (typically, ACL2 books) along with instructions for
 their use with ACL2, unless they provide a small text file explaining
 why supporting materials are not appropriate (e.g., for a theory
 paper).  Such supporting materials should have proper licenses and
 copyrights (feel free to email the workshop chairs if you have
 questions about that).  The books should be certifiable either with
 custom instructions that are clearly provided, or by running the
 following shell command in the directory of your contributed books,
 where ACL2_DIR denotes your ACL2 sources directory and ACL2 denotes a
 recent ACL2 executable.

   ACL2_DIR/books/build/cert.pl --acl2 ACL2 *.lisp

 Send the supporting materials to Matt Kaufmann,
 kaufm...@cs.utexas.edu.

 For accepted papers, we will require authors to make these books
 available by adding them to the ACL2 Community Books.  (The chairs
 may assist in that process, if asked.)  The authors can expect the
 reviewers to take the supporting materials into account during the
 refereeing process.

 The workshop will also feature ``rump sessions'', in which
 participants can describe ongoing research related to ACL2.
 Proposals for rump session presentations, including a title and short
 abstract, may be accepted until the workshop, but preference will
 be given to early submissions and subject to available time.

 ORGANIZATION:

     Chairs

     Shilpi Goel (Centaur Technology, Inc.)
     Matt Kaufmann (University of Texas)

     Program Committee

     Harsh Chamarthi (General Electric)
     Alessandro Coglio (Kestrel Institute)
     Jared Davis (Apple)
     Ruben Gamboa (University of Wyoming)
     Shilpi Goel (Centaur Technology, Inc.)
     Dave Greve (Rockwell-Collins, Inc.)
     Warren Hunt (University of Texas at Austin)
     Sebastiaan Joosten (University of Twente)
     Matt Kaufmann (University of Texas)
     John O'Leary (Intel)
     Grant Passmore (Aesthetic Integration)
     David Rager (Oracle, Inc.)
     Sandip Ray (University of Florida)
     David Russinoff (ARM, Ltd.)
     Julien Schmaltz (Eindhoven University of Technology)
     Anna Slobodova (Centaur Technology, Inc.)
     Eric Smith (Kestrel Institute)
     Sol Swords (Centaur Technology, Inc.)

 The chairs thank Mertcan Temel for his assistance with local arrangements.

 NOTE:

 Please see the website

 http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/workshop-2018/index.html

 for further information including paper submission, organization,
 venue, lodging, and eventually, registration and program information.

 Note that no block of rooms is being reserved for the workshop.
 Please see the following link
 http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/moore/acl2/workshop-2018/index.html#lodging
 for information about lodging options near the workshop venue.

 HISTORICAL INFORMATION:

 The ACL2 Workshop series has previously published with EPTCS in 2011,
 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2017.  In other past years: the proceedings
 were published with Springer LNCS 6172 in 2010, and ACM digital
 library in 2006 and 2009.  The first ACL2 workshop in 1999 resulted
 in two books:

 - Computer-Aided Reasoning: An Approach, Kaufmann, Manolios, Moore,
   Kluwer, (May, 2000)
 - Computer-Aided Reasoning: ACL2 Case Studies, Kaufmann, Manolios,
   Moore (eds), Kluwer, (May, 2000)

 ACL2 workshops have been co-located with major conferences in formal
 methods in the past: European Joint Conferences on Theory and
 Practice of Software (ETAPS) in 2002, Computer-Aided Verification
 (CAV) in 2003, Federated Logic Conference (FLoC) in 2006, 2010, and
 2014, and Formal Methods in Computer-Aided Design (FMCAD) in 2004,
 2007, 2011, 2015, and 2018.


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