Symposium on Logic in Computer Science

The ACM–IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science (LICS) is an annual academic conference on the theory and practice of computer science in relation to mathematical logic. Extended versions of selected papers of each year's conference appear in renowned international journals such as Logical Methods in Computer Science and ACM Transactions on Computational Logic.

History edit

LICS was originally sponsored solely by the IEEE, but as of the 2014 founding of the ACM Special Interest Group on Logic and Computation LICS has become the flagship conference of SIGLOG, under the joint sponsorship of ACM and IEEE.[1]

From the third [2] installment in 1988 until 2013, the cover page of the conference proceedings has featured an artwork entitled Irrational Tiling by Logical Quantifiers, by Alvy Ray Smith.[3]

Since 1995, each year the Kleene award is given to the best student paper. In addition, since 2006, the LICS Test-of-Time Award is given annually to one among the twenty-year-old LICS papers that have best met the test of time.[4]

LICS Awards edit

Test-of-Time Award edit

Each year, since 2006, the LICS Test-of-Time Award recognizes those articles from LICS proceedings 20 years earlier, which have become influential.

2006 edit

2007 edit

2008 edit

2009 edit

2010 edit

2011 edit

2012 edit

2013 edit

2014 edit

2015 edit

  • Igor Walukiewicz, "Completeness of Kozen's Axiomatisation of the Propositional Mu-Calculus"

2016 edit

2017 edit

2018 edit

2019 edit

2020 edit

2021 edit

Kleene award edit

At each conference the Kleene award, in honour of S.C. Kleene, is given for the best student paper.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Panangaden, Prakash (July 2014), "Welcome to SIGLOG!", Chair's Letter, SIGLOG News, 1 (1): 2–3.
  2. ^ "LICS archive". ACM/IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  3. ^ Irrational Tiling by Logical Quantifiers LICS cover by Alvy Ray Smith.
  4. ^ LICS awards website

External links edit