TADA 2011 - 2011 Workshop on Trading Agent Design and Analysis
Topics/Call fo Papers
Workshop on Trading Agent Design and Analysis (TADA 2011)
http://issel.ee.auth.gr/tada11
July 17th, 2011, Barcelona, Spain
Held in conjunction with the 22nd Int. Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 2011)
Important Dates and Deadlines:
- Electronic submission of full papers: April 3, 2011 (Extended!!!)
- Notification of paper acceptance/rejection: April 25, 2011
- Camera-ready copies of accepted papers: May 16, 2011
- TADA-2011 workshop: July 17th, 2011
Scope:
The study and design of trading agents are prominent application areas in artificial intelligence, since they challenge models of rational decision-making, and have interesting potential benefits for electronic commerce. To date, a broad range of trading scenarios and agent approaches have been studied, creating an extensive and rich research area. The workshop focuses on the design and evaluation of trading agents. Papers on trading agent architectures, decision making algorithms, theoretical analysis, empirical evaluations of agent strategies in negotiation scenarios, game-theoretic analyses, trading mechanisms and market architectures are all within the scope of the workshop.
The TADA workshop series traditionally (from 2003 on) coincides with the finals of the Trading Agent Competition (http://www.sics.se/tac/), and many of the contestants participate in the workshop venue.
Topics of interest:
We encourage submissions on, but not limited to:
- Distributed (scalable) algorithmic mechanism design
- Mechanisms for unreliable, dynamic and asynchronous environments
- Mechanisms for incomplete and/or imperfect information environments
- Mechanisms for information goods and services
- Mechanisms for security, privacy, accounting, verification and auditing
- Distributed (agent and mechanism) learning models
- Agent strategies in multi-institutional environments
- Economic and game theoretic specification, design and analysis
- Bargaining, voting and auction mechanisms
- Distributed reputation and trust mechanisms
- Agents that support bidding and negotiation
- Empirical evaluation of human-agent trading
- Simulation and evaluation of properties of novel and complex mechanisms
- Implemented agent-mediated electronic-commerce systems
Submission Instructions:
- Full papers.
Full papers should be 8 two-column pages, including references. Manuscripts are exptected to be in English, and should be in PDF format. Author guidelines can be found at: http://ijcai-11.iiia.csic.es/calls/call_for_papers.
- Short papers.
We are inviting the submission of *short papers* (up to 4 pages) related to TAC competitions to be presented at the workshop. Topics covered in short papers covering include strategies used in previous TAC competitions, discussions as to the effectiveness of different approaches, thoughts on applying the lessons learned through TAC to other domains.
Papers are to be submitted through the EasyChair Conference System website
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tada11
Post-workshop publication:
- The TADA-11 Proceedings will be published (electronic format) with IJCAI proceedings.
- LNCS/LNAI proceedings pending.
- A Special Issue on Trading Agents is pending.
Workshop Chair:
Andreas Symeonidis
Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
GR 54 124, Thessaloniki, Greece
Email: asymeon-AT-eng.auth.gr
Office: +30 2310 99 4344
Fax: +30 2310 99 6398
Program Committee:
- Michael Benisch, Carnegie Mellon University
- Ken Brown, University College Cork
- John Collins, University of Minnesota
- Maria Fasli, Essex University
- Shaheen Fatima, University of Loughborough
- Enrico Gerding, University of Southampton
- Maria Gini, University of Minnesota
- Amy Greenwald, Brown University
- Sverker Janson, Swedish Institute of Computer Science
- Patrick Jordan, University of Michigan
- Wolf Ketter, Rotterdam School of Management
- Kate Larson, University of Waterloo
- Kevin Leyton-Brown, University of British Columbia
- Peter McBurney, University of Liverpool
- Pericles A. Mitkas, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- Tracy Mullen, Penn State University
- Jinzhong Niu, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
- Benno Overeinder, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- David Pardoe, University of Texas at Austin
- Steve Phelps, University of Essex
- Juan Antonio Rodriguez Aguilar, IIIA-CSIC
- Alex Rogers, University of Southampton
- Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University
- Alberto Sardinha, Carnegie Mellon University
- Peter Stone, University of Texas at Austin
- Andreas Symeonidis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- Ioannis A. Vetsikas, University of Southampton
- William Walsh, CombineNet
- Michael Wellman, University of Michigan
- Dongmo Zhang, University of Western Sydney
- Haizheng Zhang, Penn State University
http://issel.ee.auth.gr/tada11
July 17th, 2011, Barcelona, Spain
Held in conjunction with the 22nd Int. Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 2011)
Important Dates and Deadlines:
- Electronic submission of full papers: April 3, 2011 (Extended!!!)
- Notification of paper acceptance/rejection: April 25, 2011
- Camera-ready copies of accepted papers: May 16, 2011
- TADA-2011 workshop: July 17th, 2011
Scope:
The study and design of trading agents are prominent application areas in artificial intelligence, since they challenge models of rational decision-making, and have interesting potential benefits for electronic commerce. To date, a broad range of trading scenarios and agent approaches have been studied, creating an extensive and rich research area. The workshop focuses on the design and evaluation of trading agents. Papers on trading agent architectures, decision making algorithms, theoretical analysis, empirical evaluations of agent strategies in negotiation scenarios, game-theoretic analyses, trading mechanisms and market architectures are all within the scope of the workshop.
The TADA workshop series traditionally (from 2003 on) coincides with the finals of the Trading Agent Competition (http://www.sics.se/tac/), and many of the contestants participate in the workshop venue.
Topics of interest:
We encourage submissions on, but not limited to:
- Distributed (scalable) algorithmic mechanism design
- Mechanisms for unreliable, dynamic and asynchronous environments
- Mechanisms for incomplete and/or imperfect information environments
- Mechanisms for information goods and services
- Mechanisms for security, privacy, accounting, verification and auditing
- Distributed (agent and mechanism) learning models
- Agent strategies in multi-institutional environments
- Economic and game theoretic specification, design and analysis
- Bargaining, voting and auction mechanisms
- Distributed reputation and trust mechanisms
- Agents that support bidding and negotiation
- Empirical evaluation of human-agent trading
- Simulation and evaluation of properties of novel and complex mechanisms
- Implemented agent-mediated electronic-commerce systems
Submission Instructions:
- Full papers.
Full papers should be 8 two-column pages, including references. Manuscripts are exptected to be in English, and should be in PDF format. Author guidelines can be found at: http://ijcai-11.iiia.csic.es/calls/call_for_papers.
- Short papers.
We are inviting the submission of *short papers* (up to 4 pages) related to TAC competitions to be presented at the workshop. Topics covered in short papers covering include strategies used in previous TAC competitions, discussions as to the effectiveness of different approaches, thoughts on applying the lessons learned through TAC to other domains.
Papers are to be submitted through the EasyChair Conference System website
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tada11
Post-workshop publication:
- The TADA-11 Proceedings will be published (electronic format) with IJCAI proceedings.
- LNCS/LNAI proceedings pending.
- A Special Issue on Trading Agents is pending.
Workshop Chair:
Andreas Symeonidis
Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
GR 54 124, Thessaloniki, Greece
Email: asymeon-AT-eng.auth.gr
Office: +30 2310 99 4344
Fax: +30 2310 99 6398
Program Committee:
- Michael Benisch, Carnegie Mellon University
- Ken Brown, University College Cork
- John Collins, University of Minnesota
- Maria Fasli, Essex University
- Shaheen Fatima, University of Loughborough
- Enrico Gerding, University of Southampton
- Maria Gini, University of Minnesota
- Amy Greenwald, Brown University
- Sverker Janson, Swedish Institute of Computer Science
- Patrick Jordan, University of Michigan
- Wolf Ketter, Rotterdam School of Management
- Kate Larson, University of Waterloo
- Kevin Leyton-Brown, University of British Columbia
- Peter McBurney, University of Liverpool
- Pericles A. Mitkas, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- Tracy Mullen, Penn State University
- Jinzhong Niu, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
- Benno Overeinder, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- David Pardoe, University of Texas at Austin
- Steve Phelps, University of Essex
- Juan Antonio Rodriguez Aguilar, IIIA-CSIC
- Alex Rogers, University of Southampton
- Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University
- Alberto Sardinha, Carnegie Mellon University
- Peter Stone, University of Texas at Austin
- Andreas Symeonidis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
- Ioannis A. Vetsikas, University of Southampton
- William Walsh, CombineNet
- Michael Wellman, University of Michigan
- Dongmo Zhang, University of Western Sydney
- Haizheng Zhang, Penn State University
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Last modified: 2011-03-25 22:24:21