ENDEREÇO E TELEFONE:
Telefone/Fax: (16) 3412-9752 / e-mail: sbmac@sbmac.org.br
Edifício Medical Center - Rua Maestro João Seppe, nº. 900, 16º. andar - Sala 163 |
São Carlos/SP - CEP: 13561-120
UC 2011 is organized by the FUNDIM laboratory of the mathematics department at the University of Turku, Finland, under the auspices of EATCS.
Original papers and posters are solicited in all all areas of unconventional computation. Papers/posters dealing with theory as well as with experiments and applications are welcome. Typical, but not exclusive, topics are: natural computing including quantum, cellular, molecular, neural and membrane computing, as well as evolutionary paradigms; chaos and dynamical systems based computing; proposals for computations going beyond the Turing model.
Submissions: Authors are invited to submit papers (at most 12 pages) or posters electronically, via EasyChair: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=uc2011 All submissions are expected to be in the pdf format. Paper submissions should be prepared following the LNCS format of Springer. Poster submissions should contain either a graphical poster or an abstract with sufficient details for the reviewers. Simultaneous submissions to other conferences with published proceedings are not permitted. Each accepted paper/poster must be presented at the conference. The author of the poster is responsible for printing it. The proceedings (only for papers) will be published by Springer LNCS series and will be available at the conference.
Membrane Computing (Mario de J. Pérez Jiménez, Sevilla, SP).
Satellite Workshops:
Physics and Computation (org. Mike Stannet),
Hypercomputation (org. Mike Stannet),
Language Theory in Biocomputing (org. Tero Harju),
Discrete Models of Complex Systems (org. Anna Lawniczak)
Conference location: The conference and the satellite workshops will take place in the Calonia and Arcanum buildings of the University of Turku.
Conference History: The first venue of the Unconventional Computation Conference (formerly called Unconventional Models of Computation) was Auckland, New Zealand, in 1998; subsequent sites of the conference were Brussels, Belgium, in 2000; Kobe, Japan, in 2002; Seville, Spain, in 2005; York, UK, in 2006; Kingston, Canada, in 2007; Vienna, Austria, in 2008; Ponta Delgada, Portugal, in 2009; and Tokyo, Japan, in 2010.