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AAMAS 2012 - 11th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS 2012)

Date2012-06-04

Deadline2011-10-12

VenueValencia, Spain Spain

Keywords

Website

Topics/Call fo Papers

11th International Conference on
Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems
(AAMAS 2012)

Valencia, Spain
June 4?8, 2012

http://aamas2012.upv.es

What’s New?
We realise that many of you will not read the CFP in detail. Please at least read the following points, which highlight significant recent changes.

When submitting papers, if the paper has appeared anywhere before, even as a short paper or in a workshop, then you must provide information on this - see the “Submission Instructions” page for details.
The “industry track” changed in 2011 to the “innovative applications” track.
In response to comments at the AAMAS 2011 community discussion session, AAMAS 2012 also invites “perspective” papers (see the end of topic list for more information)
About AAMAS
AAMAS is the leading scientific conference for research in autonomous agents and multiagent systems. The AAMAS conference series was initiated in 2002 by merging three highly respected meetings: the International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems (ICMAS); the International Workshop on Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages (ATAL); and the International Conference on Autonomous Agents (AA). The aim of the joint conference is to provide a single, high-profile, internationally respected archival forum for scientific research in the theory and practice of autonomous agents and multiagent systems.

AAMAS 2012 is the eleventh conference in the AAMAS series, following enormously successful previous conferences, and will be held at the Universitat Politècnica de València in Valencia, Spain, June 4-8,2012.

See http://www.ifaamas.org for more information on the AAMAS conference series.

Topics of Interest
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Agent Communication:

Agent commitments
Communication languages
Communication protocols
Speech act theory

Agent Cooperation:

Biologically-inspired approaches and methods
Collective intelligence
Distributed problem solving
Human-robot/agent interaction
Multi-user/multi-virtual-agent interaction
Teamwork, coalition formation, coordination
Incentives for Cooperation
Implicit Cooperation

Agent Reasoning:

Planning (single and multiagent)
Reasoning (single and multiagent)
Cognitive models
Knowledge representation

Agent Societies and Societal issues:

Artificial social systems
Environments, organisations and institutions
Ethical and legal issues
Peer to peer coordination
Privacy, safety and security
Social and organizational structure
Trust, reliability and reputation

Agent Theories, Models and Architectures:

BDI
Belief revision
Bounded rationality
Formal models of agency
Logic-based approaches and methods
Mobile agents
Modeling other agents and self
Modeling the dynamics of MAS
Reactive vs. deliberative approaches
Service oriented architectures
Verification of MAS

Agent-based simulation:

Artificial societies
Emergent behavior
Simulation techniques, tools and environments
Social simulation

Agent-based system development:

Agent development techniques, tools and environments
Agent programming languages
Agent specification or validation languages
Design languages for agent systems
Development environments
Programming languages
P2P, web services, grid computing
Software engineering (agent- or multi agent-oriented)

Agreement Technologies:

Argumentation
Collective decision making
Judgment aggregation and belief merging
Negotiation
Norms

Economic paradigms:

Electronic markets
Economically-motivated agents
Game Theory (cooperative and non-cooperative)
Social choice theory
Voting protocols
Artificial economies/markets
Auction and mechanism design
Bargaining and negotiation

Learning and Adaptation:

Computational architectures for learning
Reward structures for learning
Evolution, adaptation
Co-evolution
Single agent Learning
Multiagent Learning

Systems and Organisation:

Autonomic computing
Complex systems
Self-organisation
Perspectives

Perspective Papers

These are papers that analyse in some way the agents research community, or part of it. These papers will be handled like any other AAMAS submission; they will be evaluated in terms of their originality, soundness, significance, presentation, understanding of the state of the art, and overall quality of their technical contribution. Papers that merely present a numerical analysis of trends without insightful interpretation, or that fail to situate their analysis within the existing body of literature, are unlikely to be accepted.

Examples of appropriate topics for perspective papers include (but are not necessarily limited to):

An analysis of data concerning trends in a given sub-area of agents, along with a discussion of these trends.
An overview of the state of adoption in practice of agents, along with an analysis of reasons and future trends
Any other papers that take a "step back" and consider the research and/or adoption of some aspect (or all of) the agents community
Key Dates
Authors:

Electronic Abstract Submission: October 7, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)

Full Paper Submission: October 12, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)

Rebuttal Phase: November 29 ? December 1, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)

Author Notification: December 21, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)

Conference: June 4?8, 2012

Reviewers:

Bidding deadline: October 16, 2011 (11:59pm HST)

Paper assignments announced: October 24, 2011

Reviewing Period: October 24 ? November 21, 2011

Discussion Period: December 2?9, 2011

Submission
AAMAS 2012 seeks submissions of high-quality full papers, limited to 8 pages in length. Submissions will be rigorously peer reviewed and evaluated on the basis of originality, soundness, significance, presentation, understanding of the state of the art, and overall quality of their technical contribution. Reviews will be double blind; authors must avoid including anything that can be used to identify them. Please note that prior submission of an abstract is required to submit a full paper. However, the abstracts will not be reviewed and full (8 page) papers must be submitted for the review process to start. All work must be original (must not have appeared in a conference proceedings, book, or journal).

To know how and where you must submit your paper, please refer to the submission instructions page here.

Special Tracks
In addition to submissions in the main track, AAMAS-2012 will be soliciting papers in three special tracks. The review process for the special tracks will be similar to the main track, but with program committee members specially selected for that track.

Special Track on Robotics (Chair: Daniele Nardi):

Papers that advance theory and applications of single and multiple robots are welcome, specifically those focusing on real robots that interact with their environment. Papers should clearly explain how the work addresses challenges in robotics, opportunities for novel applications, and fundamental research issues in autonomous robotic systems. The goal is to demonstrate the synergy achieved from integration of research in agents and robotics.

Keywords for Robotics Track:

Cognitive robotics
Formal methods
Integrated perception, cognition, and action
Intelligence for human-robot interaction
Machine learning for robotics
Mapping (including exploration, coverage, and SLAM)
Networked robot/sensor systems
Robot planning (including action and motion planning)
Robot teams, multi-robot systems
Robot coordination
Robotic agent languages and middleware for robot systems
Special Track on Virtual Agents (Chair: Stefan Kopp):

Virtual agents are embodied agents in interactive virtual or physical environments that emulate human-like behavior. We encourage papers on the design, implementation, and evaluation of virtual agents as well as challenging applications featuring them. The goal is to provide an opportunity for interaction and cross-fertilization between the AAMAS community and researchers working on virtual agents and to strengthen links between the two communities.

Keywords for Virtual Agents Track:

Modeling cognition and socio-cultural behavior
Conversational agents
Verbal and non-verbal expression
Affect and personality
Multimodal agent interaction
Computational models of narrative
Pedagogical, companion, and coaching agents
Culturally-aware agents
Virtual character modeling and animation in games, education, training, and virtual environments
Empirical studies
Special Track on Innovative Applications (Chairs: Klaus Fischer & Alex Rogers):

The Innovative Applications Track is a continuation of the tradition started by the Industry Track in past years. Due to the growing maturity of the field there are now agent-based applications in widespread use across many domains, responsible for the generation of significant revenues, or the saving of major costs, or for supporting important public policy and business strategy decision-making. This special track provides the ideal forum to present and discuss your work: to inform and inspire the largest international gathering of agent technology researchers and practitioners with presentations and demonstrations of your compelling applications, agent system deployment experiences, and new business ideas. The goal is to promote the fostering of mutually beneficial relationships between members of the AAMAS community who are engaged in foundational scientific research and those who are working to make autonomous agents and multi-agent systems a commercial or public policy reality. Due to the special review process for the Innovative Applications track, papers accepted in this track may be designated in the proceedings as belonging to this track.

For submissions to the special track on innovative applications, authors are particularly encouraged to address the following questions: What is the rationale for using agent-based technology in this application domain, as opposed to other approaches? If you have deployed your technology, what insights have you gained from the experience? For instance, what lessons do you have for anyone pitching, designing, implementing, deploying, using, or evaluating similar agent systems or working in similar domains? What improvements or external factors (such as technology standards) might facilitate wider-spread adoption of your technology? What improvements in fundamental agent technology might improve your application, or enable it to be adopted more broadly, or support its better use?

Keywords for Innovative Applications Track:

Telecommunications and media
Energy and emissions
Bio-technology and health care
Financial markets
Manufacturing and logistics
Transportation and telematics
Ambient intelligence
Surveillance and security
Aerospace and defense
Business strategy and marketing
e-Government and e-Democracy
Public policy and Economics
Simulation
Implementation lessons
Business cases for MAS

Last modified: 2011-10-15 22:32:24