Overview
            During July and August 2011, the Fields Institute will host a thematic 
              program on the Mathematics of Constraint Satisfaction. The program 
              will include a 5-day summer school, three focused workshops, the 
              Coxeter Lectures, regular weekly seminars, and extended periods 
              of time for in-residence researchers and students for intensive 
              study. The program will bring together researchers from various 
              communities within pure mathematics and theoretical computer science.
            Outline of Scientific Activities
            The main activities of the program will be concentrated around 
              a series of three workshops, a summer school, and the Coxeter Lectures. 
              The summer school will take place during the last week of June, 
              2011 and the three workshops will be held at regular intervals throughout 
              the summer. The Coxeter Lectures will be given by Moshe Vardi (Rice) 
              on July 11-13, 2011.
            Participation in the Program
            All scientific events are open to the mathematical sciences community, 
              but visitors are requested to indicate their interest in participating 
              in some or all of the planned events by filling out the information 
              form found on the program website. The information form can also 
              be used to request office space or funding. Fields scientific programs 
              are devoted to research in the mathematical sciences, and enhanced 
              graduate and post-doctoral training opportunities. Part of the mandate 
              of the Institute is to broaden and enlarge the community, and to 
              encourage the participation of women and members of visible minority 
              groups in our scientific programs.
            Deadlines
            Requests for support or office space may be submitted at any time 
              by filling out the application form found on the program website. 
              The organizing committee will start to review requests in late February 
              of 2011.
            Additional Information
            For additional information on the program, please send an email 
              to thematic(at)fields.utoronto.ca . To receive updates on 
              the program please subscribe to our mailing list at www.fields.utoronto.ca/maillist 
              .
            
            Details of Scientific Activities
            
             
              
            
            
             
              Each day of the summer school will consist 
                of four 90 minute lectures plus time set aside for school participants 
                and instructors to meet to discuss questions and problems related 
                to the lectures. Lecture notes and problem sets will be prepared 
                in advance and posted on the program website. A primary goal of 
                the summer school is to provide the participants with a thorough 
                and intense introduction to the main themes of the summer program.
              The four threads of the summer school, 
                along with the lecturers are:
              * An Introduction to the CSP: Andrei Krokhin 
                (Durham University)
                * Graph Theory and Combinatorics: Jaroslav Nesetril (Charles University)
                * Universal Algebra: Ross Willard (University of Waterloo)
                * Approximability of CSPs: Ryan O'Donnell (CMU), Venkatesan Guruswami 
                (CMU)
            
            
             
               July 11-13, 2011
                Moshe Y. Vardi, Rice University
                July 11 - And 
                Logic Begat Computer Science: When Giants Roamed the Earth 
                
                July 12 -  From Philosophical to Industrial Logics 
                
                July 13 - Logic, Automata, Games, and Algorithms 
                
            
            
            Organized by:
              Pavol Hell (Simon Fraser University)
              Claude Tardif (Royal Military College, Kingston)
              Xuding Zhu (Zhejiang Normal University)
             
              This workshop will focus on all aspects 
                of graph homomorphisms, from those directly related to constraint 
                satisfaction problems, such as minimum cost and list homomorphisms, 
                versions of projectivity, and polymorphisms, to those related 
                to basic graph theoretic notions such as colourings, tree-width 
                and tree-depth, and those related to notions from category theory, 
                such as adjoint functors, to those related to statistical physics 
                such as counting homomorphisms, and study of connection matrices. 
                The goal is to bring together the main players in all aspects 
                of graph homomorphisms, and share views of new trends and techniques.
              Invited Speakers:
                Zdenek Dvorak (Charles University)
                Jan Foniok (ETH Zurich)
                Hamed Hatami (McGill)
                Pavol Hell (SFU)
                Daniel Kral (Charles University)
                Andre Raspaud (University Bordeaux I)
                Benoit Larose (Champlain College)
                Jarik Nesetril (Charles University)
                Patrice Ossona de Mendez (CAMS-CNRS, Paris)
                Arash Rafiey (IDSIA, Lugano)
                Mark Siggers (Kyungpook University)
                Claude Tardif (Royal Military College, Kingston)
                Peter Winkler (Dartmouth)
                Xuding Zhu (Zhejiang Normal University)
            
            
            Organized by:
              Libor Barto (Charles University and McMaster University)
              Andrei Krokhin (Durham University)
              Ross Willard (University of Waterloo)
             
              The main goal of this workshop is to highlight 
                the recent advances on the CSP Dichotomy Conjecture arising from 
                the algebraic approach. It will focus on the various algebraic 
                notions and results that have been developed in the attempts to 
                resolve this conjecture and connected problems and will also include 
                presentations on related algebraic topics, such as Maltsev Conditions 
                and Tame Congruence Theory. The workshop may also include presentations 
                on CSPs over infinite templates, quantified CSPs, and connections 
                with logic, finite model theory, and complexity.
              Invited Speakers:
                Manuel Bodirsky (Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau)
                Andrei Bulatov (Simon Fraser University)
                Victor Dalmau (UPF, Barcelona)
                Martin Dyer (University of Leeds)
                Peter Jeavons (University of Oxford)
                Vladimir Kolmogorov (University College, London)
                Marcin Kozik (Jagiellonian University)
                Benoit Larose (Champlain College)
                Miklos Maroti (University of Szeged)
                Barnaby Martin (Durham University)
                Ralph McKenzie (Vanderbilt University)
                Michael Pinsker (TU Vienna)
                Johan Thapper (École Polytechnique)
            
            
            Organized by:
              Andrei Bulatov (Simon Fraser University)
              Johan Hastad (KTH, Stockholm)
              Prasad Raghavendra (Microsoft Research and Georgia Tech)
             
              The workshop will focus on the recent advances 
                in our understanding of the approximation threshold of various 
                CSPs, based on progress in both algorithmic techniques and methods 
                to show tight non approximability results. The power of various 
                convex programming relaxations for CSPs, the construction of gap 
                instances highlighting limitations of such relaxations, and the 
                connections of these to the complexity of approximating CSPs will 
                be a prominent theme of the workshop. The Unique Games conjecture 
                and results revolving around it will naturally be a centerpiece 
                of the workshop. This workshop is expected to have a more interdisciplinary 
                focus. In particular one of its aims is to foster a cross fertilization 
                of ideas between the algebraic approach to characterize the tractability 
                of CSPs and the analytic approach to characterize the approximability 
                of CSPs, and draw parallels between the algebraic dichotomy conjecture 
                and the Unique Games conjecture that would hopefully shed some 
                light on both these prominent conjectures.
              Invited Speakers:
                Per Austrin (Toronto)
                Boaz Barak (Microsoft)
                Irit Dinur (Weizmann Institute)
                Subhash Khot (NYU)
                Andrei Krokhin (Durham)
                K. Makarychev (IBM Watson)
                Yury Makarychev (TTI, Chicago)
                Dana Moshkovitz (MIT)
                Elchanan Mossel (University of California, Berkeley)
                Rishi Saket (Princeton)
                David Steurer (Microsoft)
                Mario Szegedy (Rutgers)
                Yi Wu (IBM Almaden)
            
            Affiliated Activity 
            During the week of June 
              20, 2011, the annual Logic in Computer Science (LICS) meeting 
              will be held at Fields and on the campus of the University of Toronto.
             Program researchers
            Program Participants requesting support or 
              office space:
              All scientific events are open to the mathematical sciences community. 
              Visitors who are interested in office space or funding are requested 
              to apply by filling out the application form. 
              Fields scientific programs are devoted to research in the mathematical 
              sciences, and enhanced graduate and post-doctoral training opportunities. 
              Part of the mandate of the Institute is to broaden and enlarge the 
              community, and to encourage the participation of women and members 
              of visible minority groups in our scientific programs.
            For additional information contact thematic(PUT_AT_SIGN_HERE)fields.utoronto.ca
 
              
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