TCC 2011:
Call for Papers
Important dates:
Important dates: |
Conference |
March 28-30, 2011 |
Submission Deadline |
September 14, 2010
17:00 EDT
|
Notification of decision |
December 1, 2010 |
Proceedings version due |
January 3, 2011 |
Conference site: http://www.iacr.org/workshops/tcc2011.
Submission site: Submission server is now closed.
The eighth Theory of Cryptography Conference will
be held in
Providence, RI, USA, organized by Brown University and sponsored by the International Association
for Cryptologic Research (IACR). Papers
presenting original
research on foundational and theoretical aspects of cryptography are
sought.
The Theory of Cryptography Conference deals with the paradigms,
approaches,
and techniques used to conceptualize natural cryptographic problems and
provide
algorithmic solutions to them. More specifically, the scope of the
conference
includes, but is not limited to the:
- Study of known paradigms,
approaches, and techniques, directed towards their better
understanding
and utilization,
- Discovery of new paradigms, approaches
and techniques that overcome limitations of the existing ones,
- Formulation and treatment of
new cryptographic problems,
- Study of notions of security
and relations among them,
- Modeling and analysis of
cryptographic algorithms, and
- Study of the complexity
assumptions used in cryptography.
The
Theory of Cryptography Conference is dedicated to the dissemination of
results
within its scope. The conference aims to provide a meeting place for
researchers and
to be instrumental in shaping the identity of the theoretical
cryptography
community.
Instructions for authors: The submission should begin with a
title,
followed by the names, affiliations and contact information of all
authors, and a short
abstract. It should contain a scholarly exposition of ideas, techniques,
and results, including motivation and a clear comparison with related
work.
Submissions should be typeset with 11pt or larger font and reasonable
spacing and margins. They should not exceed 12 letter-sized pages, not
counting the title page, bibliography and appendices. Reviewers
are not required to read appendices; the paper should be intelligible
without them. Submissions must not substantially duplicate work that was
published elsewhere, or work that any of the authors has submitted in
parallel to any other conference or workshop that has proceedings.
The evaluation process is not anonymous. Authors of accepted papers are
expected to present their paper at
the conference.
Submission instructions: Papers must be
submitted
electronically through the
submission web page. Electronic
submissions must conform to the procedure described in the submission
server and
must be received by the deadline indicated above. Electronic submission
via the
described interface is the only form of submission considered.
Best student paper award: This
prize
is for the best paper authored solely by students, where a student is a
person
that is considered a student by the respective institution at the time
of the
paper's submission. Eligibility must be indicated in the "Comments
to Chair" at
the time of submission. The program committee may decline to make the
award, or
may split it among several papers.
Proceedings: Proceedings will be published in
Springer-Verlag's Lecture Notes in Computer Science Series and will be available at
the
conference. Instructions for preparing the final proceedings version
will be sent to the authors of accepted papers. The final copies of the
accepted
papers will be due on January 3, 2011. This is a strict deadline, and
authors
should prepare accordingly.
Program Committee:
Benny
Applebaum
(Weizmann) |
Boaz
Barak (Microsoft Research and Princeton University) |
Melissa Chase (Microsoft Research) |
Ronald
Cramer (CWI Amsterdam and Leiden University) |
Juan
Garay (AT&T Labs - Research) |
Vipul
Goyal (Microsoft Research India) |
Shai
Halevi (IBM Research) |
Yuval
Ishai (Technion and UCLA, chair) |
Hugo
Krawczyk (IBM Research) |
Anna
Lysyanskaya (Brown University) |
Vadim
Lyubashevsky (Tel-Aviv University) |
Mohammad Mahmoody (Cornell University) |
Chris
Peikert (Georgia Institute of Technology) |
Krzysztof Pietrzak (CWI Amsterdam) |
Manoj
Prabhakaran (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) |
Guy
Rothblum (Princeton University) |
Gil
Segev (Weizmann / Microsoft Research) |
Dominique Unruh (Saarland University) |
Program Chair:
Yuval Ishai
General chair: Anna Lysyanskaya
TCC Steering Committee Members: Mihir Bellare, Ivan Damgard,
Oded
Goldreich
(chair),
Shafi Goldwasser,
Johan Hastad, Russell Impagliazzo,
Ueli Maurer, Silvio Micali,
Moni Naor, and Tatsuaki Okamoto.
TCC web site: http://www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~tcc/
|