(This is the first of two postings about Attendencd at CCC.
Todays is about history. Next time I post (probably Wedensday)
I'll talk about College Park and modern times.)
Here is attendence for all years of CCC.
Where |
Year |
Attendence |
Comment |
Berkeley |
1986 |
110 |
co-locate with STOC |
Cornell |
1987 |
100 |
co-locate with LICS |
Wash, DC |
1988 |
89 |
Oregon |
1989 |
63 |
Barcelona |
1990 |
108 |
Europe |
Chicago |
1991 |
100 |
Boston |
1992 |
100 |
San Diego |
1993 |
123 |
FCRC |
Amsterdam |
1994 |
110 |
Europe |
Minnesota |
1995 |
80 |
Philadelphia |
1996 |
90 |
FCRC
| Ulm |
1997 |
80 |
Europe |
Buffalo |
1998 |
84 |
Atlanta |
1999 |
84 |
FCRC |
Florence |
2000 |
66 |
Europe |
Chicago |
2001 |
96 |
Montreal |
2002 |
140 |
Co-located with STOC |
Aarhus |
2003 |
78 |
Europe |
Amherst |
2004 |
82 |
San Jose |
2005 |
67 |
Prague |
2006 |
75 |
Europe |
San Diego |
2007 |
85 |
FCRC |
College Park |
2008 |
81 |
-
As part of FCRC: 123, 90, 84, 85.
So lately this has not been a real boon, but not a loss either.
-
Co-locate with STOC, non-FCRC: 110, 140.
-
Co-locate with LICS. 100.
-
Europe Attendence: 108, 110, 80, 66, 78, 75.
I suspect that Florence drew so badly
because there are no complexity theorists in Italy
(at least not since Luca was in High School.)
-
American non-co-locate, non-FCRC:
89, 63, 100, 100, 80, 84, 96, 82, 67, 81.
Note that the two in the 60's were on the West Coast.
Chicago did very well: it was there twice and we got
96 and 100. Boston is the other 100.
100 is a suspiciouly round number- I suspect they only had 99.
-
Lessons Learned: Good to co-locate with stoc, and good to have
it in a place that has a strong complextiy community.
We might have very high attendence in Boston co-locating
with STOC in 2010. Mitigating factor: the price of gas.
The number of people attending CCC remained more or less same since it started. Does it mean number of people working in Complexity Theory also remained the same?
ReplyDeleteThe community is substantially larger than it was 20 or even 10 years ago. The number of workshops and conferences has grown but travel budgets have declined in real terms.
ReplyDelete