Symposium on the Theory of Computing

STOC 2018


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General Information
The 50th ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 2018) is sponsored by the ACM Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory and will be held in Los Angeles, California Monday, June 25 - Friday, June 29, 2018.
STOC 2018 will be part of a 5-day TheoryFest with an expanded program of STOC papers, poster sessions, and a broad cross-section of invited talks, workshops and tutorials. This will include a special celebration for the 50th anniversary of the founding of SIGACT and STOC, which was first held in the Los Angeles area.
Important Dates
STOC Paper Submission Deadline: November 3, 2017
Submitted Papers Notification: February 9, 2018
Final STOC Paper Versions Due: April 2, 2018.
Conference Dates: June 25-29, 2018
STOC Paper Submission
Typical but not exclusive topics of interest for STOC papers include: algorithms and data structures, computational complexity, cryptography, privacy, computational geometry, algorithmic graph theory and combinatorics, optimization, randomness in computing, approximation algorithms, parallel and distributed computation, machine learning, applications of logic, algorithmic algebra and coding theory, computational biology, computational game theory, quantum computing, and theoretical aspects of areas such as robotics, databases, information retrieval, and networks. Papers that broaden the reach of theory, or raise important problems that can benefit from theoretical investigation and analysis, are encouraged.
Poster Sessions
In addition to talks, all accepted STOC papers will be presented in evening poster sessions where there will be an opportunity to talk with authors about their papers, accompanied by light refreshments.
Organizers:
General Co-Chairs: Ilias Diakonikolas & David Kempe (University of Southern California),
Program Committee Chair: Monika Henzinger (University of Vienna)
Program Committee:
Dimitris Achlioptas (University of California, Santa Cruz)
Dorit Aharonov (Hebrew University)
Susanne Albers (Technical University Munich)
Eric Allender (Rutgers University)
Sayan Bhattacharya (University of Warwick)
Richard Cole (New York University)
Vitaly Feldman (IBM)
Uriel Feige (Weizmann Institute)
Sanjam Garg (University of California, Berkeley)
Ashish Goel (Stanford University)
Parikshit Gopalan (VMware)
Monika Henzinger, chair (University of Vienna)
Giuseppe Italiano (University of Rome Tor Vergata)
Robert Kleinberg (Cornell University)
Claire Matthieu (École normale superiéure, CNRS)
Ankur Moitra (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Danupon Nanongkai (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm)
Michal Pilipczuk (University of Warsaw)
Krzysztof Pietrzak (Institute of Science and Technology, Austria)
Aaron Sidford (Stanford University)
Christian Sohler (Technical University Dortmund)
Prasad Tetali (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Kunal Talwar (Google)
Luca Trevisan (University of California, Berkeley)
Thomas Vidick (California Institute of Technology)
Emo Welzl (ETH Zurich)
Philipp Woelfel (University of Calgary)
David Woodruff (Carnegie Mellon University)
Mary Wootters (Stanford University)