Apologies for cross-posting. Please, forward to anybody who might be interested.

Extended deadline! June 30

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ICLP DC 2019 - 15th Doctoral Consortium (DC) on Logic Programming
***

The 15th Doctoral Consortium (DC) on Logic Programming provides students with 
the opportunity to present and discuss their research directions, and to obtain 
feedback from both peers and experts in the field. 
It will take place during the 35th International Conference on Logic 
Programming (ICLP) https://www.cs.nmsu.edu/ALP/iclp2019/ (September 20-25, 
2019, in Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA). 
Accepted participants will receive partial financial support to attend the 
event and the main conference. The best paper from the DC will be given the 
opportunity to make a presentation in a session of the main ICLP conference. 

Important Dates 

Paper submission (Updated date): June 30, 2019
Notification: July 15, 2019
Camera-ready copy: July 31, 2019
DC presentations: Sunday, September 22, 2019 
However, DC students are highly recommended to attend the Autumn School on 
Logic Programming on: Friday and Saturday, September 20-21, 2019 
https://sites.google.com/cs.stonybrook.edu/iclp2019dc/autumn-school-on-logic-programming
  

Audience

The DC is designed for students currently enrolled in a Ph.D. program, though 
we are also open to exceptions (e.g., students currently in a Master's program 
and interested in doctoral studies). Students at any stage in their doctoral 
studies are encouraged to apply for participation in the DC. Applicants are 
expected to conduct research in areas related to logic and constraint 
programming; topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

Theoretical Foundations of Logic and Constraint Logic Programming
Sequential and Parallel Implementation Technology
Static and Dynamic Analysis, Abstract Interpretation, Compilation Technology, 
Verification
Logic-based Paradigms (e.g., Answer Set Programming, Concurrent Logic 
Programming, Inductive Logic Programming)
Innovative Applications of Logic Programming
Submissions by students who have presented their work at previous ICLP DC 
editions are allowed, but should occur only if there are substantial changes or 
improvements to the student's work. The DC offers participants a convenient, 
more informal way to interact with established researchers and fellow students, 
through presentations, question-answer sessions, panel discussions, and invited 
presentations. The Doctoral Consortium will also provide the possibility to 
reflect - through short activities, information sessions, and discussions - on 
the process and lessons of research and life in academia. Each participant will 
give a short, critiqued, research presentation.

Discussants

Renowned experts and researchers in the fields of logic and constraint 
programming will join in evaluating submissions and will participate in the DC, 
providing valuable feedback to DC participants. 

Goals

To provide doctoral students working in the fields of logic and constraint 
programming with a friendly and open forum to present their research ideas, 
listen to ongoing work from peer students, and receive constructive feedback.
To provide students with relevant information about important issues for 
doctoral candidates and future academics.
To develop a supportive community of scholars and a spirit of collaborative 
research.
To support a new generation of researchers with information and advice on 
academic, research, industrial, and non-traditional career paths.
Submission Details
The DC is designed for students currently enrolled in a Ph.D. program, however 
Master's students who are actively involved in research (please see the list of 
topics below) can also participate in the DC program.

Applicants are expected to conduct research in areas related to logic and 
constraint programming.

Topics included, but not limited to:

Foundations: Semantics, Formalisms, Nonmonotonic reasoning, Knowledge 
representation.
Languages: Concurrency, Objects, Coordination, Mobility, Higher Order, Types, 
Modes, Assertions, Modules, Meta-programming, Logic-based domain-specific 
languages, Programming Techniques.
Declarative programming: Declarative program development, Analysis, Type and 
mode inference, Partial evaluation, Abstract interpretation, Transformation, 
Validation, Verification, Debugging, Profiling, Testing, Execution 
visualization.
Implementation: Virtual machines, Compilation, Memory management, 
Parallel/distributed execution, Constraint handling rules, Tabling, Foreign 
interfaces, User interfaces.
Related Paradigms and Synergies: Inductive and Co-inductive Logic Programming, 
Constraint Logic Programming, Answer Set Programming, Interaction with SAT, SMT 
and CSP solvers, Logic programming techniques for type inference and theorem 
proving, Argumentation, Probabilistic Logic Programming, Relations to 
object-oriented and Functional programming.
Applications: Databases, Big Data, Data integration and federation, Software 
engineering, Natural language processing, Web and Semantic Web, Agents, 
Artificial intelligence, Computational life sciences, Education, Cybersecurity, 
and Robotics.

Submissions of the research summary must be made in EPTCS format 
(http://info.eptcs.org/) and submitted via EasyChair. All papers must be 
written in English and should be between 5 and 10 pages. For all accepted DC 
papers, the student is required to attend the DC program and give a 
presentation of 20 minutes followed by discussions. A program committee 
consisting of experts in various areas related to logic and constraint 
programming reviews the submissions. Papers are reviewed by at least two, and 
usually three, referees.

The submission package should consist of the research summary in the format 
mentioned above and the additional documents mentioned below in the financial 
support section - all students must submit these documents even if they don't 
apply for financial aid (a short vita or cover letter of the applicant, a 
letter of recommendation from applicant's faculty advisor, and one paragraph 
statement outlining how the school will benefit the applicant). All material is 
to be submitted electronically, in PDF format on the Easychair system.

Easychair link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclp2019 (Doctoral 
Consortium track)

Research summary (make sure to include your complete name, address, and 
affiliation):
The body of your research summary (no more than 10 pages, but 5 is fine as 
well!) should provide a clear overview of your research, its potential impact, 
and its current status. You are encouraged to include the following sections:

Introduction and problem description
Background and overview of the existing literature
Goal of the research
Current status of the research
Preliminary results accomplished (if any)
Open issues and expected achievements
Bibliographical references 

Review Criteria

The DC program committee will select participants based on their anticipated 
contribution to the DC objectives. Participants typically have settled on their 
thesis directions and have their research proposal accepted by their thesis 
committee. Students will be selected based on clarity and completeness of their 
submission package, relevance of their research area w.r.t. the focus of ICLP, 
stage of research, recommendation letter, and evidence of promise towards a 
successful career in research and academia, such as published papers or 
technical reports.

Financial Support

Students are invited to submit to the Doctoral Consortium (within the 
submission deadline) to receive financial assistance. A number of scholarships 
for students that cover local expenses for the duration of the DC and school 
are available. To apply for these scholarships, students should submit the 
following information as part of their DC application:

A short vita or cover letter of the applicant, containing:
Full name of school and department to which you are affiliated
Name(s) of your supervising professor(s)
Title of your research work and keywords pertinent to your research
Current stage in your program of study (e.g. Ph.D./MS student, start date)
Contact information: full name, address, telephone number, and email address
URL of your web page (if any)
One paragraph statement outlining how the school will benefit the applicant.
A letter of recommendation from applicant's graduate or thesis advisor. Please 
invite your adviser(s) to give an indication of the current status of your 
research and of the expected date of thesis submission. In addition, your 
adviser(s) should briefly describe what she/he hopes you to gain from 
participation in the DC.
The letter from the advisor should also certify that the applicant is a 
full-time student.

There are other sponsorship opportunities, but they are individual:

ACM-W scholarship program: any (female) student willing to participate to ICLP 
can submit their application on the site: https://women.acm.org/scholarships/

Registration

Registration is part of the ICLP 2019 registration: 
https://www.cs.nmsu.edu/ALP/iclp2019/

Program co-chairs:

Daniela Inclezan, Miami University
Paul Fodor, Stony Brook University

Program Committee

Carmine Dodaro, University of Genova & DIBRIS, Italy
Cristina Feier, University of Bremen, Germany
Ekaterina Komendantskaya, Heriot-Watt University, UK
Fabio Fioravanti, University of Chieti-Pescara, Italy
Francesco Ricca, Department of Mathematics University of Calabria, Italy
Frank Valencia, LIX, Ecole Polytechnique, France
Jorge Fandino, University of Corunna, Spain
Jose F. Morales, IMDEA Software Research Institute, Spain
Marco Maratea, University of Genova & DIBRIS, Italy
Martin Gebser, Aalto University, Finland
Michael Gelfond, Texas Tech University, USA

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