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Report on the DIMACS Workshop on Comp. Complexity & Prog. Languages
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To: types@cs.indiana.edu
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Subject: Report on the DIMACS Workshop on Comp. Complexity & Prog. Languages
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From: Jim Royer <royer@top.cis.syr.edu>
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Date: Tue, 11 Mar 1997 15:45:52 -0500
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Delivery-Date: Tue, 11 Mar 1997 15:46:15 -0500
A report on the
DIMACS Workshop on Computational Complexity and Programming Languages
is available through:
http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Programming/index.html
The workshop, which took place 25-26 July 1996, had the goal of
bringing together researchers in computational complexity and in
programming languages to discuss common problems and the interplay
between the two areas. The report consists of a brief overview of
the workshop and abstracts of all of the talks. The talks were the
following.
INVITED TALKS
* Computability and complexity from a programming perspective,
Neil D. Jones, DIKU, University of Copenhagen
* Semantically-based cost-models and provably efficient
implementations,
Guy Blelloch, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
* Lazy functional programming languages and persistent amortized
data structures,
Chris Okasaki, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
* Complexity and optimal reduction,
Harry Mairson, Department of Computer Science, Brandeis University
* Polynomial time type-2 computation,
Bruce M. Kapron, Department of Computer Science, University of
Victoria
* Feasibility in higher types,
Daniel Leivant, Computer Science Department, Indiana University
* Berry and Curien's intensional legacy,
Denis Dancanet, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
* Intensional semantics, abstract interpretation and complexity
estimates,
Eugenio Moggi, Dipartimento di Informatica, University of Genova
* Intensional semantics and complexity,
Samson Abramsky, Department of Computer Science, Edinburgh University
CONTRIBUTED TALKS
* A feasible type-3 functional that fails to be basic feasible,
James S. Royer, School of Computer and Information Science,
Syracuse University
* Computational models based on explicit substitution with an
address oracle using parallel reduction,
Kristoffer H. Rose, BRICS, University of Aarhus
* Characterizing computation models with a constant factor time
hierarchy,
Eva Rose, DIKU, University of Copenhagen
* A category-theoretic proof that PV_\omega = PTIME,
Martin Hofmann, Fachbereich Mathematik, Technische Hochschule Darmstadt
* Half tiers and linear space (and time),
James Otto
* Explicit process locations and functional parallel programming,
Gaetan Hains, LIFO, Universite d'Orleans