Hybrid Logic and Applications
HyLo 2022
SCHEDULE: APRIL 6 AFTERNOON (3rd Room)
SCHEDULE: APRIL 6 AFTERNOON (3rd Room)
> 14h15 - 14h40 Torben Braüner (introduction)
> 14h40-15h30 Andrzej Indrzejczak (keynote), “A Survey of Proof Systems for Hybrid Logics”
> 15h30-16h00 Robert Freiman (contributed talk), “Games for Hybrid Logic”
16h00-16h30 Coffee Break
> 16h30-17h00 Philippe de Groote (contributed talk), “Ty2 revisited”
> 17h00-17h30 Marius Tritschler (contributed talk), “Hybrid Team Logics”
> 17h30-18h00 Avril Styrman (contributed talk), “Tense Logic and Ontology of Time”
> 14h40-15h30 Andrzej Indrzejczak (keynote), “A Survey of Proof Systems for Hybrid Logics”
> 15h30-16h00 Robert Freiman (contributed talk), “Games for Hybrid Logic”
16h00-16h30 Coffee Break
> 16h30-17h00 Philippe de Groote (contributed talk), “Ty2 revisited”
> 17h00-17h30 Marius Tritschler (contributed talk), “Hybrid Team Logics”
> 17h30-18h00 Avril Styrman (contributed talk), “Tense Logic and Ontology of Time”
ORGANIZERS
ORGANIZERS
Roskilde University, Denmark
Roskilde University, Denmark
Emails: torben@ruc.dk
Emails: torben@ruc.dk
patrick.rowan.blackburn@gmail.com
patrick.rowan.blackburn@gmail.com
Hybrid logic is a branch of modal logic in which it is possible to directly refer to worlds/times/states or whatever the elements of the (Kripke) model are meant to represent. Although they date back to Arthur Prior’s work in the late 1960s, and have been sporadically investigated ever since, it is only in the 1990s that work on them really got into its stride.
Hybrid logic is a branch of modal logic in which it is possible to directly refer to worlds/times/states or whatever the elements of the (Kripke) model are meant to represent. Although they date back to Arthur Prior’s work in the late 1960s, and have been sporadically investigated ever since, it is only in the 1990s that work on them really got into its stride.
It is easy to justify interest in hybrid logic on applied grounds, with the usefulness of the additional expressive power. For example, when reasoning about time one often wants to build up a series of assertions about what happens at a particular instant, and standard modal formalisms do not allow this. What is less obvious is that the route hybrid logic takes to overcome this problem (the basic mechanism being to add nominals --- atomic symbols true at a unique point --- together with extra modalities to exploit them) often actually improves the behaviour of the underlying modal formalism. For example, it becomes far simpler to formulate modal tableau systems, resolution, and natural deduction in hybrid logic, and completeness results can be proved of a generality that is simply not available in ordinary modal logic. That is, hybridization --- adding nominals and related apparatus --- seems a reliable way of curing many known weaknesses in ordinary modal logic.
It is easy to justify interest in hybrid logic on applied grounds, with the usefulness of the additional expressive power. For example, when reasoning about time one often wants to build up a series of assertions about what happens at a particular instant, and standard modal formalisms do not allow this. What is less obvious is that the route hybrid logic takes to overcome this problem (the basic mechanism being to add nominals --- atomic symbols true at a unique point --- together with extra modalities to exploit them) often actually improves the behaviour of the underlying modal formalism. For example, it becomes far simpler to formulate modal tableau systems, resolution, and natural deduction in hybrid logic, and completeness results can be proved of a generality that is simply not available in ordinary modal logic. That is, hybridization --- adding nominals and related apparatus --- seems a reliable way of curing many known weaknesses in ordinary modal logic.
The topic of the HyLo workshop of 2022 is hybrid logic and its applications, for instance within the fields mentioned above. The scope is not only standard hybrid-logical machinery like nominals, satisfaction operators, and the downarrow binder, but generally extensions of modal logic that increase its expressive power.
The topic of the HyLo workshop of 2022 is hybrid logic and its applications, for instance within the fields mentioned above. The scope is not only standard hybrid-logical machinery like nominals, satisfaction operators, and the downarrow binder, but generally extensions of modal logic that increase its expressive power.
CALL FOR PAPERS
CALL FOR PAPERS
We welcome contributions to the the theory and applications of hybrid logic. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
We welcome contributions to the the theory and applications of hybrid logic. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- applied modal logics
- temporal logic
- labelled deduction
- philosophy of time
- social reasoning
To submit a contribution, please send a one-page abstract to the organizers of the workshop.
To submit a contribution, please send a one-page abstract to the organizers of the workshop.
Depending on the quality of the abstracts, there might be a follow-up special issue of a journal, with a separate refereeing round.
Depending on the quality of the abstracts, there might be a follow-up special issue of a journal, with a separate refereeing round.
For any query, please contact the organizers of the workshop.
For any query, please contact the organizers of the workshop.
IMPORTANT DATES
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission: October 9, 2021
Submission: October 9, 2021
Notification: October 21st, 2021
Notification: October 21st, 2021
Worskhop: 6-11 April , 2022 (the workshop will take place at some point during the UNILOG congress).
Worskhop: 6-11 April , 2022 (the workshop will take place at some point during the UNILOG congress).