ICDT is a scientific conference on research in the foundations of database systems. ICDT provides an international forum for the communication of research advances on the theoretical foundations of database systems. Originally biennial, the ICDT conference has been held annually and jointly with EDBT (Extending Database Technology) since 2009.
The 20th edition of the conference will be held in Venice (Italy), from March 21st to March 24th, 2017. You can check the offical website of the EDBT/ICDT 2017 conference for further information on the program as it evolves, including the keynotes .
Important changes in the submission process and deadlines
ICDT, as well as PODS, are changing their submission schedules. Both conferences will have two submission deadlines, with the first submission cycle earlier than the deadlines for prior editions of either conference.
Important Dates
For ICDT 17 there will be two submission cycles with the following dates:
Submission Cycle | Abstract Deadline | Full Paper Deadline | Notification |
---|---|---|---|
First | March 18, 2016 | March 25, 2016 | May 29, 2016 |
Second | Sept 11, 2016 | Sept 18, 2016 | Nov 27, 2016 |
For papers in the first submission cycle that are judged to be of high quality but with substantial defects (i.e., correctable defects beyond the changes that could be addressed by the standard transformation of a submission to a camera-ready) ICDT will offer the possibility of revision. Submission of a revision for such a paper will be due by September 18, 2016. It is expected that revised papers that properly address the concerns of the reviewers will be accepted.
Submission instructions
All submissions will be electronic via EasyChair at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=icdt2017.
Papers must be in English and provide sufficient detail to allow the program committee to assess their merits. The results must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere, including the proceedings of other symposia or workshops.
Papers must be submitted as PDF documents no longer than 15 pages excluding references, using the LIPIcs style. Additional details may be included in a clearly marked appendix which, however, will be read at the discretion of the program committee.
The proceedings will appear in the Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs) series, based at Schloss Dagstuhl. This guarantees that the proceedings will be available online and free of charge, while the authors retain the rights over their work.
At least one author of each accepted paper is expected to register at the conference and to present the paper.
Topics Relevant to the Conference
Any topic related to the principles of data management is relevant to this symposium. Contributions that connect data management to theoretical computer science, and those which connect database theory and database practice, are particularly welcome.
In particular, ICDT welcomes contributions in the following areas:
- concurrency and recovery, distributed and parallel databases, cloud computing
- connections between databases and knowledge representation
- graph databases and (semantic) web data
- data mining, information extraction, search
- data streams
- data-centric (business) process management, workflows, web services
- incompleteness, inconsistency, uncertainty in databases
- data and knowledge integration and exchange, data provenance, views and data warehouses, metadata management
- domain-specific databases (multi-media, scientific, spatial, temporal, text)
- deductive databases
- data privacy and security
- database aspects of machine learning
- model theory, logics, algebras, computational complexity
- design, semantics, query languages
- data models, data structures, algorithms for data management
Awards
An award will be given to the Best Paper. Also, an award will be given to the Best Paper written by newcomers to the field of database theory. The latter award will preferentially be given to a paper written only by students; in that case the award will be called Best Student Paper Award. The program committee reserves the following rights: not to give an award; to split an award among several papers; and to define the notion of a newcomer. Papers authored or co-authored by program committee members are not eligible for any award.Conference Officers
ICDT Council Chair: Wim Martens
ICDT 2017 Program Chair: Michael Benedikt
ICDT 2017 Proceedings and Publicity Chair: Giorgio Orsi
ICDT 2017 Program Committee:
- Marcelo Arenas, Pontificia Universidad Católica, Chile
- Michael Benedikt (Chair), University of Oxford, United Kingdom
- Meghyn Bienvenu, CNRS, France
- Gianluigi Greco, University of Calabria, Italy
- Andre Hernich, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom
- Egor Kostylev, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
- Ashwin Machanavajjhala, Duke University, United States
- Yakov Nekrich, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Frank Neven, Hasselt University, Belgium
- Hung Ngo, LogicBlox Inc., United States
- Magdalena Ortiz, TU Wien, Austria
- Pawel Parys, University of Warsaw, Poland
- Jeff Phillips, University of Utah, United States
- Andreas Pieris, TU Wien, Austria
- Gabriele Puppis, CNRS, France
- Lucian Popa, IBM Almaden Research Center, United States
- Pierre Senellart, Télécom ParisTech, France
- Lidia Tendera, University of Opole, Poland
- Srikanta Tithapura, Iowa State University, United States
- Jef Wijsen, University of Mons, Belgium
- Frank Wolter, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom
Update:
The list of accepted papers from the 1st round is now available.
Pablo Barceló and Miguel Romero. The Complexity of Reverse Engineering Problems for Conjunctive Queries.
Shaleen Deep and Paraschos Koutris. The Design of Arbitrage-Free Data Pricing Schemes.
Dominik D. Freydenberger. A Logic for Document Spanners.
Tomasz Gogacz and Szymon Toruńczyk. Entropy bounds for conjunctive queries with functional dependencies.
Benny Kimelfeld, Ester Livshits, and Liat Peterfreund. Detecting Ambiguity in Prioritized Database Repairing.