European Symposium on Algorithms explained

History:1993–present
Abbreviation:ESA
Publisher:Springer Science+Business Media
Country:International
Frequency:Annual

The European Symposium on Algorithms (ESA) is an international conference covering the field of algorithms. It has been held annually since 1993, typically in early Autumn in a different European location each year. Like most theoretical computer science conferences its contributions are strongly peer-reviewed; the articles appear in proceedings published in Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Acceptance rate of ESA is 24% in 2012 in both Design and Analysis and Engineering and Applications tracks.[1]

History

The first ESA was held in 1993 and contained 35 papers. The intended scope was all research in algorithms, theoretical as well as applied, carried out in the fields of computer science and discrete mathematics. An explicit aim was to intensify the exchange between these two research communities.

Workshop on Algorithms Engineering

In 2002, ESA incorporated the conference Workshop on Algorithms Engineering (WAE). In its current format, ESA contains two distinct tracks with their own programme committees: a track on the design an analysis of algorithms, and a track on engineering and applications, together accepting around 70 contributions.

ESA Awards

ESA Test-of-Time Award

The ESA Test-of-Time Award (ESA ToTA) recognizes outstanding papers in algorithms research that were published in the ESA proceedings 19–21 years ago and which are still influential and stimulating for the field today.[2] Because the Workshop on Algorithms Engineering (WAE) merged in with ESA, the Steering Committee decided that the papers from WAE 1999 to WAE 2001 were also to be considered.

ESA Test-of-Time Award!Year!Winners!Award Committee
2022Marianne Durand, Philippe Flajolet: Loglog Counting of Large Cardinalities (Extended Abstract). In ESA 2003 Ulrik Brandes, Marco Gaertler, Dorothea Wagner: Experiments on Graph Clustering Algorithms. In ESA 2003Edith Cohen, Christos Zaroliagis, Andrew Goldberg
2021Andrew Goldberg, Jason Hartline: Competitive Auctions for Multiple Digital Goods. In ESA 2001

Giuseppe Lancia, Vineet Bafna, Sorin Istrail, Ross Lippert, and Russell Schwartz: SNPs Problems, Complexity, and Algorithms. In ESA 2001

Samir Khuller, Edith Cohen, Christos Zaroliagis
2020Rasmus Pagh, Flemming Friche Rodler: Cuckoo Hashing. In ESA 2001Uri Zwick, Samir Khuller, Edith Cohen
2019Ulrich Meyer, Peter Sanders: Delta-Stepping: A Parallel Single Source Shortest Path Algorithm. In ESA 1998Giuseppe F. Italiano, Uri Zwick, Samir Khuller
2018Bernard Chazelle: Car-Pooling as a Data Structuring Device: The Soft Heap. In ESA 1998Giuseppe F. Italiano, Jan van Leeuwen, Uri Zwick
2017James Abello, Adam L. Buchsbaum, and Jeffery R. Westbrook: A Functional Approach to External Graph Algorithms. In ESA 1998Jan van Leeuwen, Kurt Mehlhorn, Mike Paterson
2016Boris V. Cherkassky, Andrew V. Goldberg: Negative-cycle detection algorithms. In ESA 1996Kurt Mehlhorn, Mike Paterson, Jan van Leeuwen
2015Mechthild Stoer, Frank Wagner: A Simple Min Cut Algorithm. In ESA 1994Sudipto Guha, Samir Khuller: Approximation Algorithms for Connected Dominating Sets. In ESA 1996Jan van Leeuwen, Kurt Mehlhorn, Mike Paterson

ESA Best Paper Awards

ESA Best Paper Awards!Year!Track A Best Paper!Track B Best Paper!Track A Best Student Paper!Track B Best Student Paper
2022[3] Stefan Walzer:Insertion Time of Random Walk Cuckoo Hashing below the Peeling Threshold (extended abstract)Chris Schwiegelshohn and Omar Ali Sheikh-Omar:An Empirical Evaluation of k-Means CoresetsZoe Xi and William Kuszmaul:Approximating Dynamic Time Warping Distance Between Run-Length Encoded StringsTim Zeitz and Nils Werner:Combining Predicted and Live Traffic with Time-Dependent A* Potentials
2021Zhiyang He, Jason Li and Magnus Wahlström:Near-linear-time, Optimal Vertex Cut Sparsifiers in Directed Acyclic Graphs Simon D. Fink, Matthias Pfretzschner and Ignaz Rutter:Experimental Comparison of PC-Trees and PQ-Trees Wojciech Nadara, Mateusz Radecki, Marcin Smulewicz and Marek Sokołowski:Determining 4-edge-connected components in linear time Florian Wörz and Jan-Hendrik Lorenz:Evidence for Long-Tails in SLS Algorithms
2020[4] Moritz Venzin, Friedrich Eisenbrand:Approximate $CVP_$ in time $2^$Georg Osang, Mael Rouxel-Labbé, Monique Teillaud:Generalizing CGAL Periodic Delaunay TriangulationsHanrui Zhang: Improved Prophet Inequalities for Combinatorial Welfare Maximization with (Approximately) Subadditive Agents
2019Peyman Afshani, Rolf Fagerberg, David Hammer, Riko Jacob, Irina Kostitsyna, Ulrich Meyer, Manuel Penschuck and Nodari Sitchinava:Fragile Complexity of Comparison-Based AlgorithmsThomas Bläsius, Tobias Friedrich, Maximilian Katzmann, Ulrich Meyer, Manuel Penschuck and Christopher Weyand: Efficiently Generating Geometric Inhomogeneous and Hyperbolic Random GraphsCornelius Brand:Patching Colors with Tensors
2018[5] Jacob Holm, Giuseppe F. Italiano, Adam Karczmarz, Jakub Łącki, Eva Rotenberg: Decremental SPQR-trees for Planar GraphsDaniel R. Schmidt, Bernd Zey, François Margot:An Exact Algorithm for the Steiner Forest ProblemMaximilian Probst: On the Complexity of the (Approximate) Nearest Colored Node ProblemMax Bannach, Sebastian Berndt: Practical Access to Dynamic Programming on Tree Decompositions
2017[6] Marek Cygan, Lukasz Kowalik and Arkadiusz Socala: Improving TSP tours using dynamic programming over tree decompositionsHisao Tamaki:Positive-instance driven dynamic programming for treewidthMarc Roth: Counting restricted homomorphisms via Möbius inversion over matroid lattice
2016[7] Stefan Kratsch:A randomized polynomial kernelization for Vertex Cover with a smaller parameterThomas Bläsius, Tobias Friedrich, Anton Krohmer and Sören Laue:Efficient Embedding of Scale-Free Graphs in the Hyperbolic PlaneAdam Kunysz:The Strongly Stable Roommates ProblemMichele Borassi and Emanuele Natale:KADABRA is an ADaptive Algorithm for Betweenness via Random Approximation
Since 2022, ESA also awards the best paper for the Simplicity Track:

ALGO conferences

Since 2001, ESA is co-located with other algorithms conferences and workshops in a combined meeting called ALGO. This is the largest European event devoted to algorithms, attracting hundreds of researchers.

Other events in the ALGO conferences include the following.

ATMOS was co-located with the International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming (ICALP) in 2001–2002.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Algorithms – ESA 2012 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) . 2012 . 2012-09-17 .
  2. Web site: Test-of-Time Award – ESA . 2023-08-29 . en-US.
  3. Web site: Schedule – ALGO 2022 . 2023-08-29 . en-US.
  4. Web site: ALGO 2020 - September 7-10, 2020 - Pisa, Italy . 2023-08-29 . algo2020.di.unipi.it . en.
  5. Web site: ESA 2018: Program . 2023-08-29 . algo2018.hiit.fi . en.
  6. Pruhs . Kirk . Sohler . Christian . 2017 . Pruhs . Kirk . Sohler . Christian . Front Matter, Table of Contents, Preface, Programm Committees, External Reviewers . 25th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms (ESA 2017) . Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs) . Dagstuhl, Germany . Schloss Dagstuhl–Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik . 87 . 0:i–0:xx . 10.4230/LIPIcs.ESA.2017.0 . free . 978-3-95977-049-1.
  7. Sankowski . Piotr . Zaroliagis . Christos . 2016 . Sankowski . Piotr . Zaroliagis . Christos . Front Matter, Table of Contents, Preface, Programm Committee, External Reviewers . 24th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms (ESA 2016) . Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs) . Dagstuhl, Germany . Schloss Dagstuhl–Leibniz-Zentrum fuer Informatik . 57 . 0:i–0:xxiv . 10.4230/LIPIcs.ESA.2016.0 . free . 978-3-95977-015-6.