last updated: 3-jan-2012
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- Agents Applied in Health Care (AAHC)
http://deim.urv.cat/~itaka/workshops/aamas2012/
This seventh edition of the Workshop on Agents Applied in Health Care
will address the main issues related to the design and application of
agent technology to health care problems. Topics of interest include,
but are not restricted to, remote care delivery, agent-based decision
support systems in health care, distributed patient scheduling, and
agent-based health care simulation and modelling. Papers that describe
deployed applications of health care systems based on cooperative
agents are particularly welcome.
(half-day workshop)
- ACAN : Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations
http://www2.uah.es/acan2012/
Complex Automated Negotiations have been widely studied and have become
an emerging area in the field of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent
Systems. These issues are being explored by researchers from different
communities in Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent systems. The goal of
this workshop is to bring together researchers from these communities to
learn about each others' approaches, form long-term collaborations, and
cross-fertilize the different areas to accelerate progress towards
scaling up to larger and more realistic applications.
(full-day workshop)
- ADMI : Agents and Data Mining Interaction
http://admi12.agentmining.org/
The ADMI workshop provides a premier forum for sharing research and
engineering results, as well as potential challenges and prospects
encountered in the respective communities and the coupling between agents
and data mining. The workshop welcomes theoretical work and applied
dissemination aiming to: (1) exploit agent-enriched data mining and
demonstrate how intelligent agent technology can contribute to critical data
mining problems in theory and practice; (2) improve data mining-driven
agents and show how data mining can strengthen agent intelligence in
research and practical applications; (3) explore the integration of agents
and data mining towards a super-intelligent system; (4) discuss existing
results, new problems, challenges and impact of integration of agent and
data mining technologies as applied to highly distributed heterogeneous,
including mobile, systems operating in ubiquitous and P2P environments; and
(5) identify challenges and directions for future research and development
on the synergy between agents and data mining.
(full-day workshop)
- ALA : Adaptive and Learning Agents
http://como.vub.ac.be/ALA2012/
Adaptive Learning Agents encompasses diverse fields such as Computer
Science, Software Engineering, Biology, as well as Cognitive and Social
Sciences. The ALA workshop will focus on agents and multiagent systems which
employ learning or adaptation. The workshop will serve as an inclusive forum
for the discussion of ongoing or completed work in both theoretical and
practical issues of adaptive and learning agents and multiagent systems.
This workshop will focus on all aspects of adaptive and learning agents and
multiagent systems with a particular emphasis on how to modify established
learning techniques and/or create new learning paradigms to address the many
challenges presented by complex real-world problems.
(full-day workshop)
- AOSE : Agent-Oriented Software Engineering
http://winf.in.tu-clausthal.de/events/aose12/
Since the early 1990s, multi-agent system researchers have developed a large
body of knowledge on the foundations and engineering principles for
designing and developing agent-based systems. The 12 past editions of the
agent-oriented software engineering workshop (AOSE) had a key role in this
endeavor. For 2012, the workshop organizers and the steering committee
propose to organize an edition of AOSE workshop aimed at exploring the new
role emerging of agent-oriented software engineering as a bridge from the
now consolidated agent oriented programming languages and platforms, to
recent systems modelling paradigms like self-*, autonomic systems, and
systems of systems (SoS). Thus, it is our hope to explore in this workshop,
from an agent-based perspective, foundations, models, methods,
architectures, and tools for engineering future software-intensive IT
eco-systems.
(full-day workshop)
- ArgMAS : Argumentation in Multiagent Systems
http://www.mit.edu/~irahwan/argmas/argmas12/
The main goal of ArgMAS 2012 is to bring together the community of
researchers working on argumentation in multi-agent systems. The workshop
will focus on the concepts, theories, methodologies, and applications of
computational models of argument in creating autonomous agents and
multi-agent systems. Argumentation can be abstractly defined as the formal
interaction of different arguments for and against some conclusion (eg, a
proposition, an action intention, a preference, etc). A single agent may use
argumentation techniques to perform individual reasoning, to resolve
conflicting evidence, or to decide between conflicting goals. Multiple
agents may also use dialectical argumentation in order to identify and
reconcile differences between themselves, through interactions such as
negotiation, persuasion, and joint deliberation.
(full-day workshop)
- ARMS : Autonomous Robots and Multirobot Systems
http://mmi.tudelft.nl/arms2012
Robots are agents, too. Indeed, agent researchers are sometimes inspired by
robots, sometimes use robots in motivating examples, and sometimes make
contributions to robotics. Both practical and analytical techniques in agent
research influence, and are being influenced by, research into autonomous
robots and multi-robot systems.
Despite the significant overlap between the multiagent and robotics research
areas, roboticists and agents researchers have only a few opportunities to
meet and interact. The recently established robotics track at AAMAS is one
such opportunity. The goal of the proposed workshop is to extend and widen
this opportunity, by offering a forum where researchers in this area of
research can interact and present promising innovative research directions,
and new results. The workshop is coordinated and associated with the AAMAS
robotics track.
(full-day workshop)
- ATES : Agent Technologies for Energy Systems
http://www.ates2012.org/
The Agent Technologies for Energy Systems workshop provides a forum for
researchers and practitioners seeking to apply agent technologies within
future energy systems such as the smart grid.
(full-day workshop)
- ATT : Agent in Traffic and Transportation
http://www.ia.urjc.es/att2012/
Building effective and user-friendly transportation systems is one of the
big challenges for engineers in the 21st century. The purpose of this
workshop is to bring researchers and practitioners together in order to set
up visions on how agent technology can be and is used for today's isolated
IT-tools so as to model, simulate, and manage large-scale complex
transportation systems. Therefore, we are interested in research papers,
case studies and practitioners' reports on the implementation and use of
Autonomous Agents in all areas related to transportation, traffic and
logistics. Besides running real-world applications, we are also interested
in papers concerning demonstrators or testbed that are still under
development. Conceptual papers and those reporting on particular components
of transportation systems are also welcome.
(half-day workshop)
- CAVE : Cognitive Agents in Virtual Environments
http://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~dignu101/CAVE12/
The CAVE workshop is meant to connect people that are working on the use of
agent technology in virtual environments. Within the agent community there
is a lot of work done on multi-agent systems, both theoretical as well as
practical. Such properties as communication, team work, coordination and
cooperation of agents are important if agents are to interact effectively
with each other and human participants in all sorts of virtual activity such
as serious gaming. We want to explore how these results might be used to
support these interactions and which extra requirements should be imposed
for this context. Finally, the workshop would like to promote the testing
and evaluation of practical agent frameworks to establish which framework is
most appropriate for different types of games or other virtual applications.
(full-day workshop)
- COIN : Coordination, Organization, Institutions and Norms
http://ict1.tbm.tudelft.nl/coin2012/
Coordination, Organizations, Institutions and Norms are four key governance
elements for the regulation of open multi-agent systems. The COIN workshop
aims to bring together researchers in autonomous agents and multi-agent
systems working on the scientific and technological aspects of
organizational theory, electronic institutions and computational economies
from an organizational and institutional perspective. Besides the regular
topics, the 14th version of COIN focusses on research from the field of
cloud computing; with a special interest in topics such as the organization
of cloud computing, and using cloud computing for large scale multi-agent
organizations.
(full-day workshop)
- CoopMAS : Cooperative Games in Multiagent Systems
http://staff.science.uva.nl/~stephane/coopmas12/
The use of cooperative game theory to study how agents should cooperate and
collaborate, along with the related topic of coalition formation, has
received growing attention from the multiagent systems, game theory, and
electronic commerce communities. The focus of much of the current work in
this area has been on exploring methods by which agents can form coalitions
so as to solve problems of joint interest, make group decisions, and
distribute gains arising from such cooperation.
(half-day workshop)
- DALT : Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies
http://www.di.unito.it/~baldoni/DALT-2012/
The workshop on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies (DALT),
in its tenth edition this year, is a well-established forum for
researchers interested in sharing their experiences in combining
declarative and formal approaches with the engineering and
technological aspects of agents and multiagent systems. DALT aims at
providing a discussion forum to both (i) support the transfer of
declarative paradigms and techniques to the broader community of agent
researchers and practitioners, and (ii) to bring the issue of
designing complex agent systems to the attention of researchers
working on declarative languages and technologies.
(full-day workshop)
- EEA : Emotional and Empathic Agents
http://gaips.inesc-id.pt/aamas12-wseea/
The main goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers from
different disciplines to discuss the creation of what we call "empathic
agents". Empathy has been associated with the processes that make a person
to have "feelings that are more congruent with another's situation than
with his own situation". Humans, when interacting with virtual agents or
robots can be led to feel empathy, and experience a diverse set of
emotional reactions. On the other hand, agents and robots can in a certain,
perhaps limited way, also show certain emotions in reaction to human
emotions, thus seemingly expressing empathy towards other agents and
towards humans. Further, agents interacting in social simulation scenarios
may react to the other agents in a way that is more congruent with the
other's. Thus, by seeking inspiration in empathic relations established
between humans and between humans and animals, in this workshop we expect
to explore these dimensions of empathic agents.
(half-day workshop)
- HAIDM : Human-Agent Interaction Design and Models
https://sites.google.com/site/humanagentsystems
As the boundaries of autonomous agents and multi-agent systems continue to
expand, there is an increasing need for agents to interact with humans. In
fact, the field of multi-agent systems has matured from conceptual models
to applications within the real-world (e.g., Engergy and sustainability,
disaster management, or health care). One significant challenge that
arises when transitioning these conceptual models to applications is
addressing the inevitable human interaction. To this end, this workshop
examines major challenges at the intersection of human-agent systems.
The workshop will be divided into two key tracks in order to reflect the
main research directions taken in the community, namely Human-Agent
Interaction (HAI) and Modelling Agent Systems with Humans (MASH). While
the former is takes a human-centric view of human-agent systems and focuses
on the design of human-agent coordination mechanisms, trust issues in
human-agent interaction, interaction techniques, and human activity
recognition, the latter is concerned with finding better models of human
behavior in a variety of settings so that autonomous and multi-agent
systems can appropriately interact with human agents (e.g., agent-human
negotiation strategies or health care agents encouraging physical therapy
for a variety of recovering patients). Hence, this workshop aims to
establish a forum for researchers to discuss common issues that arise in
designing and modeling human-agent interaction in different domains.
(full-day workshop)
- LAMAS : Logical Aspects of Multi-Agent Systems
http://icr.uni.lu/lamas2012/
The workshop will provide an annual meeting forum for the research
community working on various logical aspects of MAS from the
perspectives of logic, artificial intelligence, computer science, and
game theory. It will address the whole range of issues that arise in
the context of using logic in MAS, from theoretical foundations to
algorithmic methods and implemented tools. LAMAS'2012 will be the
main annual event of the LAMAS research network and will continue the
series of annual LAMAS workshops.
(half-day workshop)
- MABS : Multi-Agent Based Simulation
http://www.irit.fr/mabs2012/
The Multi-Agent-Based Simulation (MABS) workshop is the thirteenth of a
series that began in 1998.The workshop will provide a forum for social
scientists, agent researchers and developers, and simulation researchers,
to assess the current state of the art in the modeling and simulation of
social systems and MAS, to identify where existing approaches can be
successfully applied, to learn about new approaches and explore future
research challenges, and to promote exchanges in an inter-disciplinary
environment.
(full-day workshop)
- MSDM : Multiagent Sequential Decision Making Under Uncertainty
http://gaips.inesc-id.pt/~switwicki/msdm2012/
In sequential decision making, an agent's objective is to choose actions,
based on its observations of the world, that will maximize its performance
over the course of a series of such decisions. The MSDM workshop focuses
on extensions of principled single-agent models (e.g., MDPs and POMDPs) and
methods (e.g., planning and learning) to systems of multiple agents. Over
the past decade, a variety of different multiagent models have emerged for
cooperative agents (e.g., the MMDP, Dec-POMDP, and MTDP) as well as for
self-interested agents (e.g., the I-POMDP and POSG). The purpose of this
workshop is to bring together researchers in the field of multiagent
sequential decision making to present and discuss promising new work, to
identify recent trends in model and algorithmic development, and to
establish important directions and goals for further research and
collaboration. In the long term, the active discussions that the MSDM
workshop promotes will help us to overcome the challenges of applying
multiagent sequential decision making methods to large-scale real-world
problems in, for instance, security, sustainability, public safety and
health.
(full-day workshop)
- OptMAS : Optimisation in Multi-Agent Systems
http://sites.google.com/site/optmas2012/
The number of novel applications of multi-agent systems has
followed an exponential trend over the last few years, ranging
from online auction design, through multi-sensor networks, to
scheduling of tasks in multi-actor systems. Multi-agent systems
designed for all these applications generally involve some form of
very hard optimization problems that are substantially different from
problems traditionally dealt with in other areas (e.g., industrial
processes or scheduling applications). This workshop invites works
from different strands of the multi-agent systems community that
pertain to the design of algorithms, models, and techniques to deal
with multi-agent optimisation problems. In so doing, this workshop
aims to provide a forum for researchers to discuss common issues that
arise in solving optimisation problems in different areas and
elaborate common benchmarks to test their solutions.
(full-day workshop)
- ProMAS : Programming in Multiagent Systems
http://www.agents.cs.nott.ac.uk/events/promas2012
Now in its 10th edition, ProMAS has proved to be an invaluable venue for
bringing together leading researchers from both academia and industry to
discuss key issues in the design of programming languages and tools for
multi-agent systems. In particular, the workshop promotes the discussion and
exchange of techniques, concepts, requirements and principles central to
multi-agent programming technology. These include the theory and application
of agent programming languages, how to effectively implement a multi-agent
system specification or design, the verification and analysis of agent
systems, as well as the implementation of social structures in agent-based
systems (e.g., organisations, coordination, and communication in multi-agent
systems).
(full-day workshop)
- SCW : Spatial Computing Workshop
http://www.spatial-computing.org/scw12:start
In the field of distributed systems, space plays various important roles,
ranging from computational resource (e.g., parallelism) to the result of the
computation itself (e.g., formation control or self-assembly). For example,
in multiagent-based systems, spatial relationships are often used to
organize the interactions between agents, at least in applications in which
the problem and the space are intertwined. Furthermore, multiagent-based
systems and their behaviors can be specified and analyzed relying on spatial
notions like: location, neighborhood, diffusion, propagation, etc. The goal
of the 5th Spatial Computing Workshop is to serve as an inclusive forum for
the discussion of ongoing or completed work focusing on the theoretical and
practical issues of explicitly using space in the design process of
multiagent or multiactor systems. We invite researchers to explore spatial
computing in the context of multiagent-based systems at different
abstraction levels, ranging from relevant concepts and theories for the
top-down specification of spatial applications, to suitable methodologies
and tools, and novel spatial applications.
(full-day workshop)
- TRUST : Trust in Agent Societies
http://t3.istc.cnr.it/trustwiki/index.php/Call_for_papers_-_15th_International_Workshop_on_Trust_in_Agent_Societies_(TRUST12)
Trust and Trustworthiness (along with related concepts such as privacy,
reputation, security, control) have become major research topics in computer
science. The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers (even from
different disciplines) who can contribute to a better understanding of trust
and reputation in agent societies. We seek papers that address trust as it
arises in any kind of interaction among social agents (human-human,
human-computer, human-human through computers, computer-computer).
Applications are of interest, especially in e-commerce, e-health, and
e-governement. We welcome computational and theoretical models and
approaches to trust as well as applications and empirical studies on trust.
This edition of the workshop will emphasize the theme of "Trust and
Agreement".
(full-day workshop)
- TADA/AMEC : Joint Workshop on Trading Agent Design and Analysis and Agent-Mediated Electronic Commerce
http://www.cs.utep.edu/kiekintveld/Workshops/TADAAMEC12.html
The design and analysis of electronic commerce systems and automated trading
agents is a prominent area of research in artificial intelligent and
multi-agent systems. Research in this area includes methods for designing
both agents and market institutions, and makes of of a wide variety of AI
techniques including planning, decision theory, game theory, machine
learning, and optimization. The scope of the workshop includes descriptions
of agent architectures, decision-making algorithms, theoretical analysis of
market institutions and agents, empirical studies of agent performance or
e-commerce systems, negotiation and contracting strategies, game theoretic
analysis, mechanism design and other related topics.
(full-day workshop)