About this Event
SPEAKER
Prof. David Pym, University College London
AGENDA
16:00 - FACS AGM
18:00 - Peter Landin Semantics Seminar
SYNOPSIS
FACS Annual General Meeting, followed by the annual FACS Peter Landin Semantics Seminar, delivered by by Prof. David Pym, University College London
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHY
I am a logician, mathematician, and informatician.
My research is mainly in logic, where I work in pure logic, including - proof-theoretic semantics, also known as the theory of meaning, and its inferentialist philosophical context - the proof theory and semantics of reductive logic and proof-search (see, for example, Reductive Logic: Proof Theory, Semantics, and Control, by David Pym and Eike Ritter, Oxford Logic Guides, and the EPSRC-funded project ReLiC; reductive logic can be seen to be the foundation of automated reasoning, logic-based AI, and logic programming, including inductive logic programming, and - the semantics, proof theory, and applications of bunched logics.
I also work on developing logic-based methods as a mathematical modelling technology for reasoning about systems, security, and behaviour (see, for example, the EPSRC-funded project IRIS).
I am particularly interested in the philosophy and methodology of modelling. I am beginning to develop logic-based approaches to a semantic theory of information (in the philosophical spirit of situation theory) from the inferentialist perspective of proof-theoretic semantics.
Related to this is a developing interest in ideas from truthmaker semantics and possibility semantics.
I also work in information security, where I work in - the philosophy and methodology of security - security economics and policy, and - systems security modelling, with a focus on individual, organizational, and societal security behaviours. Together with my colleague Prof. Tyler Moore, I am Editor-in-Chief of OUP's Journal of Cybersecurity.
While my main research interests lie in the foundations of logic, as described above, my overall perspective unifies these aspects of my work: I am interested in developing foundations, frameworks, theories, and tools for understanding and reasoning about the complex socio-economic-technical systems that define and support our world.
My contributions have been mainly in the following areas: dependent type theory and logical frameworks, including proof theory, semantics, and a unification algorithm; reductive logic and proof-search, including proof theory and semantics, for classical intuitionistic, and substructural logics; categorical models of the classical sequent calculus and its theory of Cut-reduction; the bunched logic BI and its relatives, including proof theory, semantics, algebraic theory, and computational interpretations, and their applications to program logics, including Separation Logic, and security; distributed systems modelling based on resource semantics and process algebra; modal and epistemic bunched logics and layered graph logics, with applications in access control; utility-theoretic concepts in distributed systems modelling and process algebra, with applications in systems security modelling; trust domains; information security economics; the philosophy and methodology of information security; public policy in information security, including information stewardship.
I have broad experience of research, teaching, and management in leading universities and in industry.
Trust me, I'm a logician.
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THIS EVENT IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY:
FACS (Formal Aspects of Computing Science) group
https://www.bcs.org/membership-and-registrations/member-communities/facs-formal-aspects-of-computing-science-group
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, 25 Copthall Ave, London, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00