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$300, non-student, non-AI participant $150, student, non-AI participant (AI-participant, $100 and $50) Accommodation
Info in Melbourne Contact
CARE organisers Online Discussion Groups
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following groups for updates and discussions about CARE and Agents. |
Invited Speaker: Professor
Michael Luck (King's College, University of London, United Kingdom) Room: TBA, Date: 1st December 2009, Time: TBA
Abstract: Cooperation is the fundamental underpinning of multi-agent systems,
allowing agents to interact to achieve their goals. However, agents must
manage the risk associated with interacting with others who have different
objectives, or who may fail to fulfill their commitments. There are many
ways in which such a desirable social order may be encouraged or even
mandated. For example, trust offers a mechanism for modeling and reasoning
about reliability, honesty, etc, while organisations and norms provide a
framework within which to apply them, and motivations provide a means for
representing and reasoning about overall objectives. In this talk, I will
consider the role of trust, organisations and norms in a motivation-based
view of agency that seeks to regulate behaviour, and will illustrate some
of these issues with aspects of several projects, including the CONTRACT
project, concerned with contract-based electronic business systems. Biography: Michael Luck is Professor of Computer Science in the Department of
Computer Science at King's College London, where he leads the Agents and
Intelligent Systems subgroup and undertakes research into agent
technologies and intelligent systems. His work has sought to take a
principled approach to the development of practical agent systems, and
spans formal models and theories as well as practical applications. Recent
work has been directed at norms and institutions, declarative programming
of agent systems, and industrial deployment and technology forecasting. He
is currently leading work at King's on the IST CONTRACT project, concerned
with distributed electronic business systems on the basis of dynamically
generated, cross-organisational contracts. Professor Luck
has published around 200 articles in these and related areas, and twelve
books (including monographs, textbooks, and edited collections); he was
lead author of the AgentLink roadmaps in 2003 and 2005. He is a a director
of the board of the International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and
Multi-Agent Systems (IFAAMAS), co-founder of the European Multi-Agent
Systems (EUMAS) workshop series (and currently serving on its Advisory
Board, having previously served as its first Chair), co-founder and Chair
of the steering committee of the UK Multi-Agent Systems Workshops (UKMAS),
and a Steering Committee member for the Central and Eastern European
Conference on Multi-Agent Systems (CEEMAS). Professor Luck was a member of
the Executive Committee of AgentLink III, the European Network of
Excellence for Agent-Based Computing, having previously been the Director
of AgentLink II. He is an editorial board member of Autonomous Agents and
Multi-Agent Systems, the International Journal of Agent-Oriented Software
Engineering, Web Intelligence and Agent Systems, and ACM Transactions on Autonomous
and Adaptive Systems, and was previously series editor for Artech House's
Agent Oriented Systems book series. Michael Luck is general co-chair of the
Ninth International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems
(AAMAS 2010), to be held in Toronto, Canada in May 2010. |
Collaboration is required when multiple agents achieve complex goals
that are difficult or impossible to attain for an individual agent. This
collaboration takes place under conditions of incomplete information,
uncertainty, and bounded rationality, much of which has been previously
studied in economics and artificial intelligence. However, many real world
domains are characterised by even greater complexity, including the
possibility of unreliable and non-complying collaborators, complex market and
incentive frameworks, and complex transaction costs and organisational
structures. This workshop's thematic focus is on collaborative and autonomous
agents that plan, negotiate, coordinate, and act under this complexity.
This workshop aims to foster discussions
on computational models of collaboration in distributed systems,
addressing a range of theoretical and practical issues. We seek contributions
of members in research and industry that use the agent paradigm to approach
their problems.
Some issues of interest of this workshop are:
The one day workshop will feature a mixture of invited talks,
discussions and submitted contributions describing current work or work in
progress in collaborative agent research and technology. The workshop
environment fosters open discussions among all participants, particularly
encouraging students to discuss their research topics and seek feedback from
senior agent researchers.
Abstract submission: October 27, 2009
Full paper submission: October 30, 2009
Notification: November 10, 2009
Camera ready: November 20, 2009
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RESEARCH
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APPLICATION
AREAS
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Submission
and Publication
Call for Papers (CFP) in TXT format
Call for Papers (CFP) in PDF
CARE
2009 Poster in PDF
Submission is to be done electronically at EasyChair at: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=care2009.
Submissions should be formatted according to LNCS specification and submitted
as a PDF file. Instructions and templates can be found at: www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
CARE 2009 seeks two types of submissions:
- Full paper of 8-12 pages.
- Short paper of 2-4 pages (such as position and early result papers)
are welcome with the option of extending it to a full paper for the
post-proceedings.
Submissions will be peer-reviewed by three reviewers per paper. Selection
criteria will include relevance, significance, impact, originality, technical
soundness, quality of presentation. Some preference may also be given to
papers which address emergent trends or important common themes, or which
enhance balance of workshop topics. Since this workshop is associated with
the AI'09 conference, accepted papers should be relevant to the AI research
community.
Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. CARE
2009 plans to offer a best paper
award for the best full paper submission, and a selection of
papers is planned to be published as post-proceedings with a major
international publisher, subject to an appropriate number and quality of
submissions.
GENERAL CHAIR
Christian
Guttmann (Monash University, Australia)
CO-CHAIRS
Michael
Georgeff (PrecedenceHealthCare, Australia)
Frank
Dignum (University Utrecht, Netherlands)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Philippe Pasquier (Simon Fraser
University, Canada)
Iyad Rahwan (British University of
Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
Kobi Gal (Harvard University,
United States of America)
Simon Thompson (British Telecom
Research Laboratories, United Kingdom)
Cees Witteveen (Delft University
of Technology, Netherlands)
Mathijs de Weerdt (Delft
University of Technology, Netherlands)
Gord McCalla (University of
Saskatchewan, Canada)
Andrew Gilpin (Hg Analytics,
United States of America)
David Morley (SRI International,
United States of America)
Kumari Wickramasinghe (Monash
University, Australia)
Liz Sonenberg (Melbourne
University, Australia)
Sascha Ossowski (University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain)
Samin Karim (Accenture, Australia)
Lawrence Cavedon (NICTA and RMIT University, Australia)
Michael Winikoff (University of Otago, New Zealand)
Rafael Bordini (Federal
University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)
Wayne Wobcke
(University of New South Wales, Australia)
Marcelo Blois Ribeiro (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio
Grande do Sul, Brazil)
more to be announced...
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