The Australian National University
CSL Home | CECS Home | ANU Home | Search ANU | HORUS | Staff Home
The Computer Sciences Laboratory
Research School of Information Sciences and Engineering
College of Engineering and Computer Science
Corner of North and Daley Roads, Bldg 115
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200 Australia

telephone (+61) (2) 6125 8644
facsimile   (+61) (2) 6125 8651
email administrator.csl@cecs.anu.edu.au
    RSISE

CSL News

Logic Summer School 6-18 December 2009 Posted on 2009-09-07
Registration is now open for the Logic Summer School December, the 18th in a series. The Summer School will consist of short courses on aspects of pure and applied logic taught by experts from Australia and overseas, and will be held at the ANU. In addition to the scheduled courses, there will be practical sessions giving students the opportunity to use web-based logic software.

Why Logic? Modern logic is the foundational discipline of the information sciences. It includes not only the science of reasoning but also computability theory, type theory and other tools for understanding processes, declarative programming, automatic proof generation, program verification and much more. It spreads into planning, into program synthesis, into circuit design and into discourse analysis. It underpins the entire science of artificial intelligence.Part mathematics, part philosophy and these days part computing science, logic remains a core intellectual study and is increasingly relevant to practical concerns.

Topics will be taught by world experts in their fields, including John Slaney, Rajeev Gore, Torsten Schaub, Peter Baumgartner, Michael Norrish, Andreas Bauer, Alwen Tiu, Patrik Haslum, and Errol Martin.

There are no formal prerequisites in attending the Summer School. However, participants are expected to be familiar with the concepts and notation of propositional and first order logic. They will normally have completed at least an introductory logic course at tertiary level and have some background in related disciplines such as pure mathematics, analytical philosophy or computation theory. Anyone in doubt as to whether they have sufficient background knowledge should contact the Convenor at: John.Slaney@anu.edu.au



Upcoming Events:

2009-11-23 11:00:00
Prof. Koichi Asatani
Trends of NGN and Its Issues
2009-11-26 11:00:00
Parastoo Sadeghi
On Coding for Cooperative Data Exchange
2009-11-26 11:00:00
Dr Rui Zhang
The V*-Diagram, a Query Dependent Approach to Moving Nearest Neighbor Queries
2009-11-26 16:00:00
Ullrich Hustadt
Reasoning in Monodic First-Order Temporal Logic
2009-11-27 11:00:00
Dr. Sergej Celikovsky
Nonlinear techniques for the Acrobot tracking with application to robot walking