Workshop on Homotopy Type Theory/ Univalent Foundations
The Internet, July 17-18, 2021
Co-located with
FSCD 2021, The Internet @ Buenos Aires, Argentina
Videos of the talks
Will be posted on YouTube with the consent of the speakers.
Overview
Homotopy Type Theory is a young area of logic, combining ideas
from several established fields: the use of dependent type
theory as a foundation for mathematics, inspired by ideas and
tools from abstract homotopy theory. Univalent Foundations are
foundations of mathematics based on the homotopical
interpretation of type theory.
The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers
interested in all aspects of Homotopy Type Theory/Univalent
Foundations: from the study of syntax and semantics of type
theory to practical formalization in proof assistants based on
univalent type theory.
Submissions
Submissions should consist of a title and an abstract of no more than 2 pages in pdf format,
via EasyChair.
- Abstract submission deadline: 25 May 2021
- Author notification: 24 June 2021
Considering the broad background of the expected audience, we
encourage authors to include information of pedagogical value
in their abstract, such as motivation and context of their
work.
Registration
Registration is free of charge, but mandatory. Please register on the registration site of FSCD.
Invited speakers
Saturday:
Sunday:
Contributed talks
Saturday:
Sunday:
- Andrew Swan The Nielsen-Schreier Theorem in Homotopy Type Theory
- Dominik Kirst and Felix Rech The Generalised Continuum Hypothesis Implies the Axiom of Choice in HoTT
- J. Daniel Christensen Non-accessible localizations
- Jarl G. Taxerås Flaten and Dan Christensen Ext groups in Homotopy Type Theory
- David Jaz Myers Modal Fracture of Higher Groups
- Felix Cherubini Some simple higher rings
Program
Talks will take place between 2pm-3pm, 3:30-5:30pm, and 6-8pm Central European Summer Time on Saturday and Sunday, with 60 minutes for invited speakers and 30 minutes for contributed talks.
Program committee
- Benedikt Ahrens (University of Birmingham)
- Carlo Angiuli (Carnegie Mellon University)
- Paolo Capriotti
- Floris van Doorn (University of Pittsburgh)
- Eric Finster (University of Cambridge)
- Kuen-Bang Hou (Favonia) (University of Minnesota)
- Chris Kapulkin (University of Western Ontario)
- Paige Randall North (University of Pennsylvania)
- Emily Riehl (Johns Hopkins University)
- Christian Sattler (Chalmers University of Technology)
- Andrew Swan (Carnegie Mellon University)
Organizers
- Benedikt Ahrens,
B.Ahrens@cs.bham.ac.uk
(University of Birmingham)
- Chris Kapulkin,
kkapulki@uwo.ca
(Western University)
Previous HoTT/UF Workshops