IATEM 2014 - 3rd International Workshop on Intelligent Agent Technology, Power Systems and Energy Markets - IATEM'14
Date2014-09-01 - 2014-09-05
Deadline2014-04-10
VenueMunich, Germany
Keywords
Websitehttps://www.dexa.org
Topics/Call fo Papers
Third International Workshop on Intelligent Agent Technology, Power Systems and Energy Markets (IATEM 2014)
A workshop of the 25th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications (DEXA 2014)
September 1-5, 2014, Munich, Germany
The electrical power industry provides the production and delivery of electricity to consumers through a power grid. Electricity is most often produced at power stations, transmitted at high-voltages to multiple substations near populated areas, and distributed at medium and low-voltages to consumers. Clearly, the complexity of the power grid and the potential cascading events combining natural and human causes can lead to catastrophic failures (e.g., the 4 October 2006 quasi-blackout that affected nine European countries).
Furthermore, the deregulation of the electricity industry has basically separated the contestable functions of electricity generation and retail from the natural monopoly functions of transmission and distribution. This, in turn, has led to the establishment of a wholesale market for electricity generation, when competing generators can offer their electricity output to retailers, and a retail market for electricity retailing, when end-use customers can choose their supplier from competing electricity retailers. These competitive markets and new renewable energy sources have further complicated the already complex power industry.
Multi-agent systems (MAS) are systems composed of software agents that interact to solve problems that are beyond the individual capabilities of each agent. MAS represent a relatively new and rapidly expanding area of research and development. The major motivations for the increasing interest in MAS research include the ability to solve problems in which data, expertise, or control is distributed, the ability to allow inter-operation of existing legacy systems, and the ability to enhance performance along the dimensions of computational efficiency, reliability, and robustness. Agent technology has been used to solve real-world problems in a range of industrial and commercial applications.
Intelligent software agents are a potentially powerful computational tool to provide new solutions to practical power systems engineering and energy market problems. This tool (and the associated technologies) creates an opportunity for cross-fertilization between power systems and energy markets. Accordingly, the purpose of this 3rd international workshop, as an event of DEXA 2014, is to provide a high-profile, internationally respected discussion forum on the most recent and innovative scientific research in the areas of power systems and energy markets that can benefit most from new techniques and software agents (now and in the future). The unifying focus of the workshop will be on methodological aspects---this will not preclude any specific topic, but preference will be given both to research work that establishes some connection with methodological aspects and to successful applications built upon some existing or developing methodology.
A workshop of the 25th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications (DEXA 2014)
September 1-5, 2014, Munich, Germany
The electrical power industry provides the production and delivery of electricity to consumers through a power grid. Electricity is most often produced at power stations, transmitted at high-voltages to multiple substations near populated areas, and distributed at medium and low-voltages to consumers. Clearly, the complexity of the power grid and the potential cascading events combining natural and human causes can lead to catastrophic failures (e.g., the 4 October 2006 quasi-blackout that affected nine European countries).
Furthermore, the deregulation of the electricity industry has basically separated the contestable functions of electricity generation and retail from the natural monopoly functions of transmission and distribution. This, in turn, has led to the establishment of a wholesale market for electricity generation, when competing generators can offer their electricity output to retailers, and a retail market for electricity retailing, when end-use customers can choose their supplier from competing electricity retailers. These competitive markets and new renewable energy sources have further complicated the already complex power industry.
Multi-agent systems (MAS) are systems composed of software agents that interact to solve problems that are beyond the individual capabilities of each agent. MAS represent a relatively new and rapidly expanding area of research and development. The major motivations for the increasing interest in MAS research include the ability to solve problems in which data, expertise, or control is distributed, the ability to allow inter-operation of existing legacy systems, and the ability to enhance performance along the dimensions of computational efficiency, reliability, and robustness. Agent technology has been used to solve real-world problems in a range of industrial and commercial applications.
Intelligent software agents are a potentially powerful computational tool to provide new solutions to practical power systems engineering and energy market problems. This tool (and the associated technologies) creates an opportunity for cross-fertilization between power systems and energy markets. Accordingly, the purpose of this 3rd international workshop, as an event of DEXA 2014, is to provide a high-profile, internationally respected discussion forum on the most recent and innovative scientific research in the areas of power systems and energy markets that can benefit most from new techniques and software agents (now and in the future). The unifying focus of the workshop will be on methodological aspects---this will not preclude any specific topic, but preference will be given both to research work that establishes some connection with methodological aspects and to successful applications built upon some existing or developing methodology.
Other CFPs
- 5th International Workshop on Biological Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
- International Conference on Learning Representations(ICLR2014)
- Workshop on Global Optimisation
- 2015 International Conference on High-Performance Compilation, Computing, and Communications (HP3C 2015)
- Second International Conference of Artificial Intelligence and Fuzzy Logic (AI & FL 2014)
Last modified: 2013-11-09 06:54:45