[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

PATAT Call for Participation




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                            CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

                                 PATAT 2004

                         The 5th international conference
              on the Practice And Theory of Automated Timetabling

               Wednesday, 18th August - Friday, 20th August 2004

                               Sheraton Hotel
                                 Pittsburgh
		                    USA
                    
                     http://mat.gsia.cmu.edu/PATAT04
                 Early registration deadline: JULY 1, 2004

This conference is the fifth in a series of conferences that serve as
a forum for an international community of researchers, practitioners and
vendors on all aspects of computer-aided timetable generation.

The themes of the conference include (but are not limited to):

   o  Sports Timetabling
   o  Educational Timetabling
   o  Transport Timetabling
   o  Employee Timetabling
   o  Complexity Issues
   o  Distributed Timetabling Systems
   o  Experiences
   o  Implementations
   o  Commercial Packages
   o  Interactive vs Batch Timetabling
   o  Timetable Updating
   o  Relationship with Other Scheduling Problems
   o  Timetabling Research Areas, including: Constraint Based Methods
					     Evolutionary Computation
                    			     Artificial Intelligence
					     Graph Colouring
					     Expert Systems
					     Heuristic Search
					     Knowledge Based Systems
					     Operational Research
					     Simulated Annealing
					     Local Search
					     Mathematical Programming
					     Soft Computing
					     Tabu Search
Invited Speakers:

The following have agreed to give invited presentations at this conference:

Cindy Barnhart, MIT
Martin Henz, National University of Singapore
Irv Lustig, ILOG
Stephen Smith, Carnegie Mellon

Research Presentations:

More than 70 research presentations are planned, encompassing the broad range
of issues in timetabling. Titles and abstracts are available at
http://mat.gsia.cmu.edu/PATAT04 .  Full papers and extended abstracts will
be available in the conference proceedings available to participants.

Registration Fees:

Registration fees include admission to all technical sessions, an opening
reception (Tuesday), 3 breakfasts (Wednesday-Friday), 3 lunches
(Wednesday-Friday), and 2 dinners (Wednesday and Thursday). Registration
does not include hotel costs nor the optional Saturday outings. The
registration fees are:

    * Regular: $650 preregistration/$800 late registration
    * Student: $300 preregistration/$400 late registration 
    SPECIAL:  The first 50 students to register will receive 
                     $100 off their fee

Please register through the conference web site http://mat.gsia.cmu.edu/PATAT04

EARLY REGISTRATION ENDS JULY 1, 2004

Hotel:

The conference will be held at the Sheraton Station Square across the river
from downtown Pittsburgh.  The special conference rate of $119/night (plus
tax) is available through our web site at http://mat.gsia.cmu.edu/PATAT04

ROOMS ARE LIMITED SO EARLY RESERVATION IS ENCOURAGED

Saturday Excursion:

The PATAT conference has a traditional outing on the Saturday after the
conference.  We have arranged two tours to the spectacular Pennsylvania
countryside:  the first is a whitewater rafting tour, the second involves a
tour of the Frank Lloyd Wright architectural masterpiece Fallingwater.  Spots
are limited so please reserve your space upon registration.  An additional
fee is charged for this outing.


Programme Committee

Edmund Burke (co-chair)		University of Nottingham, UK
Michael Trick (co-chair)	Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Jonathan Bard			University of Texas, USA
Viktor Bardadym			Noveon Inc., Belgium
Cynthia Barnhart		MIT, USA
James Bean			University of Michigan, USA
Patrice Boizumault		University of Caen, France
Peter Brucker			University of Osnabrueck, Germany
Michael Carter			University of Toronto, Canada
David Corne			University of Exeter, UK
Peter Cowling			University of Bradford, UK
Patrick De Causmaecker		KaHo St.-Lieven, Gent, Belgium
Kathryn Dowsland		Gower Optimal Algorithms Ltd.
Andreas Drexl			University of Kiel, Germany
Moshe Dror			University of Arizona, USA
Wilhelm Erben			FH Konstanz - 
				University of Applied Sciences, Germany
Jacques A. Ferland		University of Montreal, Canada
Martin Henz			National University of Singapore, Singapore
Alain Hertz			Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada
Michel Gendreau			Centre de Recherche sur les Transports,
				Montreal, Canada
Jeffrey Kingston		University of Sydney, Australia
Raymond Kwan			University of Leeds, UK
Gilbert Laporte			HEC Montreal, Canada
Vahid Lotfi			University of Michigan-Flint, USA
Anuj Mehrotra			University of Miami, USA
Amnon Meisels			Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel
George Nemhauser		Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Thiruthlall Nepal		Durban Institute of Technology, 
				South Africa
James Newall			EventMap Ltd, UK
Ben Paechter			Napier University, Edinburgh, UK
Gilles Pesant			Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada
Sanja Petrovic			University of Nottingham, UK
Jean-Yves Potvin		Universite de Montreal, Canada
Andrea Schaerf			Universita` di Udine, Italy
Jan Schreuder			University of Twente, Enschede, 
				The Netherlands
Stephen Smith			Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Jonathan Thompson		Cardiff University, UK
Paolo Toth			University of Bologna, Italy
Greet Vanden Berghe		KaHo St.-Lieven, Belgium
Stefan Voss			University of Hamburg, Germany
Dominique de Werra		EPF-Lausanne, Switzerland
George White			University of Ottawa, Canada
Michael Wright			Lancaster University, UK
Jay Yellen			Rollins College, USA

About the Venue:

Pittsburgh has long shed its reputation as a town of soot and smog.  Today,
it is a vibrant city with a new wave of high-tech and service industries and 
architectural masterpieces.  Intimate restaurants and high-energy clubs
make Pittsburgh one of the "most livable" cities in the country.  Pittsburgh
boasts abundent shopping at great prices, world-class museums, symphony,
ballet, opera, and a multitude of attractions.

The conference will be held in one of Pittsburgh's most active areas.  Lying
just south of downtown, Station Square incorporates shopping, bars,
restaurants, and clubs.  Downtown is a short walk away across the
river.  Frequent river boats offer a unique view of Pittsburgh, and can
even be used to get to Pittsburgh's sports venues.  The conference hotel,
the Sheraton Station Square, is at the heart of this area, and offers
both affordable rates and outstanding conference facilities.

Pittsurgh International Airport was ranked number one in the United States
and number three in the world by Conde Nast Traveler and is a short 20
minute cab ride from Station Square.

On the Saturday after the conference, we will organize outings to the
beautiful Pennsylvania countryside.  One group will head off to some
of the best white-water rafting in the eastern seaboard.  The
Youghiogheny offers challenges to experienced rafters while not
overwhelming the novice.  A second group will head out to tour one
of architect Frank Lloyd Wright's masterpieces "Fallingwater", a home
through which a stream literally runs.  The two groups will meet up for
final conversation.

You can find more information about Pittsburgh at

http://www.visitpittsburgh.com/cvbonline/default.asp

and more about the hotel at

http://www.starwood.com/sheraton/search/hotel_detail.html?propertyID=693


For more information, contact:

Prof E.K.Burke
Automated Scheduling, Optimisation and Planning Research Group.
School of Computer Science and Information Technology
University of Nottingham
University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD
United Kingdom
e-mail: ekb@cs.nott.ac.uk

or

Prof M.Trick
Graduate School of Industrial Administration
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
USA 
e-mail: trick@cmu.edu

PATAT 2004 WEB SITE
Full updated information is always available from

http://mat.gsia.cmu.edu/PATAT04

This message has been scanned but we cannot guarantee that it and any
attachments are free from viruses or other damaging content: you are
advised to perform your own checks.  Email communications with the
University of Nottingham may be monitored as permitted by UK legislation.