Call For Papers
The International Conference on Theory and Applications of
Satisfiability Testing (SAT) is the premier annual meeting for
researchers focusing on the theory and applications of the propositional
satisfiability problem, broadly construed. In addition to plain
propositional satisfiability, it also includes Boolean optimization
(such as MaxSAT and Pseudo-Boolean (PB) constraints), Quantified Boolean
Formulas (QBF), Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT), and Constraint
Programming (CP) for problems with clear connections to Boolean-level
reasoning.
Many hard combinatorial problems can be tackled using SAT-based
techniques including problems that arise in Formal Verification,
Artificial Intelligence, Operations Research, Computational Biology,
Cryptography, Data Mining, Machine Learning, Mathematics, etc. Indeed,
the theoretical and practical advances in SAT research over the past
twenty years have contributed to making SAT technology an indispensable
tool in a variety of domains.
SAT 2017 aims to further advance the field by soliciting original
theoretical and practical contributions in these areas with a clear
connection to Satisfiability. Specifically, SAT 2017 invites scientific
contributions addressing different aspects of SAT interpreted in a broad
sense, including (but not restricted to) theoretical advances (such as
exact algorithms, proof complexity, and other complexity issues),
practical search algorithms, knowledge compilation, implementation-level
details of SAT solvers and SAT-based systems, problem encodings and
reformulations, applications (including both novel application domains
and improvements to existing approaches), as well as case studies and
reports on findings based on rigorous experimentation.
Scope
SAT 2017 welcomes scientific contributions addressing different
aspects of the satisfiability problem, interpreted in a broad sense.
Domains include MaxSAT and Pseudo-Boolean (PB) constraints, Quantified
Boolean Formulae (QBF), Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT), as well as
Constraint Satisfaction Problems (CSP). Topics include, but are not
restricted to:
Theoretical advances (including algorithms, proof complexity, parameterized complexity, and other complexity issues);
Practical search algorithms;
Knowledge compilation;
Implementation-level details of SAT solving tools and SAT-based systems;
Problem encodings and reformulations;
Applications (including both novel applications domains and improvements to existing approaches);
Case studies and reports on insightful findings based on rigorous experimentation.
Paper Categories
Submissions to SAT 2017 are solicited in three paper categories, describing original contributions.
Long papers (9 to 15 pages, excluding references)
Short papers (up to 8 pages, excluding references)
Tool papers (up to 6 pages, excluding references)
Long and short papers should contain original research, with
sufficient detail to assess the merits and relevance of the
contribution. For papers reporting experimental results, authors are
strongly encouraged to make their data and implementations available
with their submission. Submissions reporting on case studies are also
encouraged, and should describe details, weaknesses, and strengths in
sufficient depth. Long and short papers will be evaluated with the same
quality standards, and are expected to contain a similar contribution
per page ratio.
The authors should choose between a long or a short paper depending
on the space they need to fully describe their contribution. The
classification between long and short papers is mainly a way to balance
the workload of the reviewing process among PC members. It also impacts
the duration of the presentation of the work during the conference. It
is the responsibility of the authors to make sure that their paper is
self-contained in the chosen limit of pages. There will be no
requalification of the submissions by the PC.
Tool papers must obey to a specific content criteria. A tool paper
should describe the implemented tool and its novel features. Here
“tools” are interpreted in a broad sense, including descriptions of
implemented solvers, preprocessors, etc., as well as systems that
exploit SAT solvers or their extensions for use in interesting problem
domains. A demonstration is expected to accompany a tool presentation.
Papers describing tools that have already been presented previously are
expected to contain significant and clear enhancements to the tool.
Submissions
Submissions should not be under review elsewhere nor be submitted
elsewhere while under review for SAT 2017, and should not consist of
previously published material.
Submissions not consistent with the above guidelines may be returned without review.
Besides the paper itself, authors may submit a supplement consisting
of one file in the format of a gzipped tarball (.tar.gz or .tgz) or a
gzipped file (.gz) or a zip archive (.zip). Authors are encouraged to
submit a supplement when it will help reviewers evaluate the paper.
Supplements will be treated with the same degree of confidentiality as
the paper itself. For example, the supplement might contain detailed
proofs, examples, software, detailed experimental data, or other
material related to the submission. Individual reviewers may or may not
consult the supplementary material; the paper itself should be
self-contained.
All papers submissions are done exclusively via EasyChair in Springer’s LaTeX llncs2e style.
One author of each accepted paper is expected to present it at the conference.