Remove ads
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE) is the premier academic conference on automated deduction and related fields.[1] The first CADE was organized in 1974 at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. Most CADE meetings have been held in Europe and the United States. However, conferences have been held all over the world. Since 1996, CADE has been held yearly. In 2001, CADE was, for the first time, merged into the International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning (IJCAR).[2] This has been repeated biannually since 2004.[3]
In 1996, CADE Inc. was formed as a non-profit sub-corporation of the Association for Automated Reasoning to organize the formerly individually organized conferences.
Nr | Proceedings | Date | Year | Location | Editor(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LNAI | |||||
01 | 1975 | ||||
02 | 1976 | ||||
03 | 1977 | ||||
04 | 1979 | ||||
05 | 0087 | 1980 | Les Arcs, France | Wolfgang Bibel, Robert Kowalski | |
06 | 0138 | 1982 | New York, USA | Donald W. Loveland | |
07 | 0170 | May 14–16 | 1984 | Napa, California, USA | Robert Shostak |
08 | 0230 | Jul 27 – Aug 1 | 1986 | Oxford, England | Jörg H. Siekmann |
09 | 0310 | May 23–26 | 1988 | Argonne, Illinois, USA | E. Lusk, Ross A. Overbeek |
10 | 0449 | 1990 | Kaiserslautern, Germany | Mark Stickel | |
11 | 0607 | Jun 15–18 | 1992 | Saratoga Springs, USA | D. Kapur |
12 | 0814 | Jun 26 – Jul 1 | 1994 | Nancy, France | Alan Bundy |
13 | 1104 | Jul 30 – Aug 3 | 1996 | New Brunswick, NJ, USA | Michael A. McRobbie, J.K. Slaney |
14 | 1249 | Jul 13–17 | 1997 | Townsville, North Queensland, Australia | William McCune |
15 | 1421 | Jul 5–10 | 1998 | Lindau, Germany | Claude Kirchner, Hélène Kirchner |
16 | 1632 | Jul 7–10 | 1999 | Trento, Italy | Harald Ganzinger |
17 | 1831 | Jun 17–20 | 2000 | Pittsburgh, PA, USA | David A. McAllester |
18 | 2392 | Jul 27–30 | 2002 | Copenhagen, Denmark | Andrei Voronkov |
19 | 2741 | Jul 28 – Aug 2 | 2003 | Miami Beach, FL, USA | Franz Baader |
20 | 3632 | Jul 22–27 | 2005 | Tallinn, Estonia | Robert Nieuwenhuis |
21 | 4603 | Jul 17–20 | 2007 | Bremen, Germany | Frank Pfenning |
22 | 5663 | Aug 2–7 | 2009 | Montreal, Canada | Renate A. Schmidt |
23 | 6803 | Jul 31 – Aug 5 | 2011 | Wrocław, Poland | Nikolaj Bjørner, Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans |
24 | 7898 | Jun 9–14 | 2013 | Lake Placid, New York, USA | Maria Paola Bonacina |
25 | 9195 | Aug 1–7 | 2015 | Berlin, Germany | Amy Felty, Aart Middeldorp |
26 | 10395 | Aug 6–11 | 2017 | Gothenburg, Sweden | Leonardo de Moura |
27 | 10900 | Jul 14–17 | 2018 | Oxford, United Kingdom | Didier Galmiche, Stephan Schulz, Roberto Sebastiani |
28 | 11716 | Aug 23–30 | 2019 | Natal, Brazil | Pascal Fontaine |
29 | 12166–7 | Jun 29 – Jul 6 | 2020 | Paris, France | Nicolas Peltier, Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans |
30 | Jul 11–16 | 2021 |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.