Abstract submission deadline: Submission deadline: Notification to authors: Conference dates: |
September 3, 2024 (04:59pm PDT) September 5, 2024 (04:59pm PDT) November 2, 2024 January 7-January 10, 2025 |
Ittai Abraham, Intel Sepehr Assadi, University of Waterloo Andris Ambainis, University of Latvia Prabhanjan Ananth, University of California, Santa Barbara Srinivasan Arunachalam, IBM Research Hadley Black, University of California, San Diego Adam Bouland, Stanford University Eshan Chattopadhyay, Cornell University Lijie Chen, University of California, Berkeley Rishabh Goyal, University of Wisconsin-Madison Prahladh Harsha, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Aayush Jain, Carnegie Mellon University Rahul Jain, National University of Singapore Michael Kapralov, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne Robert Kleinberg, Cornell University Vasilis Kontonis, University of Texas at Austin Pravesh Kothari, Princeton University Ravi Kumar, Google Research Jason Li, Carnegie Mellon University |
Daniel Lokshtanov, University of California, Santa Barbara Pasin Manurangasi, Google Research Raghu Meka, UCLA (Chair) Dor Minzer, Massachussetts Institute of Technology Chinmay Nikhre, University of Washington, Seattle Shayan Oveis Gharan, University of Washington, Seattle Prasad Raghavendra, University of California, Berkeley Guy Rothblum, Apple Shubhangi Saraf, University of Toronto Sushant Sachdeva, University of Toronto Tselil Schramm, Stanford University Sahil Singla, Georgia Institute of Technology Srikanth Srinivasan, University of Copenhagen Avishay Tal, University of California, Berkeley Roei Tell, University of Toronto Christos Tzamos, University of Athens David Wajc, Technion Ryan Williams, Massachussetts Institute of Technology Jiapeng Zhang, University of Southern California |
Authors are encouraged to post full versions of their submissions in a freely accessible online repository such as the arxiv, the ECCC, or the Cryptology ePrint archive. It is generally expected that authors of accepted papers will make full versions of their papers, with proofs, available before the conference begins.
All the talks are expected to be in person. The talks in the conference will not be recorded, and instead the authors of each paper will be asked to upload a 20-25 minute talk, which will be posted online.
Participants near to graduation (on either side) will be given an opportunity to present (in 2-3 minutes) their results, research, plans, personality, and so on during the "Graduating bits" session. This is one of the important traditions of ITCS, and not to be missed! Details on how to participate will be provided closer to the conference date.
The committee may award a "best student paper" award.
ITCS is committed to an inclusive conference experience, respectful of all participants, and free from any discrimination or harassment, including unwelcome advances or propositions of an intimate nature, particularly when coming from a more senior researcher to a less senior one. All ITCS attendees are expected to behave accordingly. If you experience or witness discrimination, harassment or other unethical behavior at the conference, we encourage you to seek advice by contacting SafeToC advocates (http://safetoc.org/index.php/toc-advisors/)
The accepted papers will be published by LIPIcs in the electronic proceedings of the conference. To accommodate the publishing traditions of different fields, authors of accepted papers can ask the PC chair to have only a one page abstract of the paper appear in the proceedings, along with a URL pointing to the PDF of the full paper on an online archive.