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Notice
AISB event Bulletin Item
CALL FOR PAPERS: Engineering Multi-Agent Systems, Saint Paul MN (U.S.A.)
Held with AAMAS 2013, Saint Paul, Minnesota (USA), 6th-7th May 2013 http://emas2013.otago.ac.nz
************************************************************************ EMAS is the result of the merging of three "parent" workshops: AOSE, DALT and ProMAS. It looks at their communities as its natural reference audience. MOTIVATION Although much progress has been made, the design, implementation and deployment of multi-agent systems still poses many challenges. Some of these concern design and software engineering aspects, for example, how to effectively design agents and their interactions? Other challenges concern implementation, for instance, how to effectively implement multi-agent coordination or organisations? Further challenges concern use of logic-based techniques for verification of agent systems. It is increasingly apparent that there are benefits in considering design and implementation challenges together. For example, design artefacts can be used to support and assist with debugging and testing. Another example is the development of agent-oriented programming languages that result in programs that are more readily verifiable. A final example is the use of declarative techniques that span design and implementation. This unveils a tight interlacement among the different research issues in multi-agent systems engineering. This naturally results in a workshop that brings together the currently separate topics (but overlapping communities) that focus on software engineering aspects (AOSE), programming aspects (ProMAS), and the application of declarative techniques to design, programming and verification (DALT). Furthermore, EMAS is an ideal place for papers on innovative applications of agents. In particular, there is a great interest from the EMAS community in having people who have developed applications articulate the lessons learned and engineering challenges identified in building and deploying their applications. GOALS AND TOPICS The EMAS workshop explicitly pursues three goals: A. To progress and further develop the understanding of how to engineer multi-agent systems. B. To bring together the communities that are concerned with different aspects of engineering multi-agent systems, and by doing so, allow for better interchange of ideas between the communities, thus exploiting synergies discussed above. C. To attract workshop papers that describe innovative applications We thus call for research papers that are concerned with any aspect of the engineering of multi-agent systems. Specifically including any topics that would fall within the scope of one or more of the three parent workshops: a) Agent-Oriented Software Engineering, b) Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies, c) Programming Multi-Agent Systems. We also seek application papers that describe developed applications. Such papers should not just describe an application, but also the lessons learned and the engineering challenges identified in building and deploying the applications. AUTHOR GUIDELINES EMAS welcomes the submission of theoretical, experimental, methodological as well as application papers with a clear research focus on the topics outlined above. Each paper will be evaluated by three members of the PC. SUBMISSIONS Paper length should be at most 16 pages, including the text, figures, and references. The submissions must be formatted according to the Springer Verlag LNCS style. PDF format is required. Papers can be submitted via EasyChair 'EMAS2013', https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=emas2013 PROCEEDINGS Pre-proceedings containing all accepted papers are provided electronically on a USB stick as part of the AAMAS workshop registration package. The plan is to publish revised versions of accepted papers in a Lecture Notes in Computer Science volume. For this purpose, authors will be given the opportunity to revise and re-submit their contributions after the conference. IMPORTANT DATES Paper submission deadline: 30th January 2013 Paper notifications: 28th February 2013 Camera ready paper (pre-proceedings): 11th March 2013 Workshop: 6th-7th May 2013 COMMITTEES Organizing Committee Massimo Cossentino (National Research Council, Italy) Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni (University of Pierre and Marie Curie - Paris 6, France) Michael Winikoff (University of Otago, New Zealand) Steering Committee Matteo Baldoni (Italy), Rafael Bordini (Brazil), Mehdi Dastani (Netherlands), Jürgen Dix (Germany), Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni (France), Paolo Giorgini (Italy), Jörg Müller (Germany), M. Birna Van Riemsdijk (Netherlands), Tran Cao Son (USA), Gerhard Weiss (Netherlands), Danny Weyns (Sweden), Michael Winikoff (New Zealand). Preliminary Program Committee Natasha Alechina (Nottingham, UK) Matteo Baldoni (Torino, Italy) Cristina Baroglio (Torino, Italy) Jeremy Baxter (QinetiQ, UK) Olivier Boissier (Saint-Etienne, France) Rafael Bordini (FACIN-PUCRS, Brazil) Lars Braubach (Hamburg, Germany) Rem Collier (Dublin, Ireland) Mehdi Dastani (Utrecht, Netherlands) Scott DeLoach (Kansas state, USA) Louise Dennis (Liverpool, UK) Virginia Dignum (Delft, Netherlands) Jürgen Dix (Clausthal, Germany) Aditya Ghose (Wollongong, Australia) Paolo Giorgini (Trento, Italy) Adriana Giret (Valencia, Spain) Marie-Pierre Gleizes (IRIT, Uni. Paul Sabatier, France) Jorge J. Gomez-Sanz (Madrid, Spain) Christian Guttmann (IBM, Australia) James Harland (RMIT, Australia) Vincent Hilaire (Belford-Montbelliard, France) Koen Hindriks (Delft, Netherlands) Benjamin Hirsch (Berlin, Germany) Tom Holvoet (KU Leuven, Belgium) Jomi Hübner (Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil) Michael Huhns (South Carolina, USA) Joao Leite (Lisboa, Portugal) Yves Lesperance (York, Canada) Brian Logan (University of Nottingham, UK) Viviana Mascardi (Genova, Italy) Philippe Mathieu (Lille 1, France) John-Jules Meyer (Utrecht, Netherlands) Frédéric Migeon (IRIT, Uni. Paul Sabatier, France) Ambra Molesini (Bologna, Italy) Pavlos Moraitis (Paris Descartes, France) Haralambos Mouratidis (East London, UK) Jörg Müller (Clausthal, Germany) Peter Novák (Czech TU, Czech Republic) Andrea Omicini (Bologna, Italy) Lin Padgham (RMIT, Australia) Van Parunak (Jacobs Technology, USA) Fabio Patrizi (Imperial college, UK) Juan Pavon (Madrid, Spain) Michal Pechoucek (Czech TU, Czech Republic) Alexander Pokahr (Hamburg, Germany) Enrico Pontelli (New Mexico state, USA) Alessandro Ricci (Bologna, Italy) Ralph Rønnquist (Intendico, Australia) Chiaki Sakama (Wakayama Uni., Japan) Sebastian Sardiña (RMIT, Australia) Valeria Seidita (Palermo, Italy) Onn Shehory (IBM Haifa , Israel) Maarten Sierhuis (Ejenta, Inc., USA) Guillermo Ricardo Simari (Uni Nacional del Sur, Argentina) Munindar Singh (North Carolina, USA) Tran Cao Son (New Mexico state, USA) Bas Steunebrink (Lugano, Switzerland) Pankaj Telang (CISCO, USA) John Thangarajah (RMIT, Australia) Paolo Torroni (Bologna, Italy) M. Birna van Riemsdijk (Delft, Netherlands) Wamberto Vasconcelos (Aberdeen, UK) Jørgen Villadsen (DTU Informatics, Denmark) Gerhard Weiss (Maastricht, Netherlands) Danny Weyns (Linnaeus, Sweden) Wayne Wobcke (UNSW, Australia) Pinar Yolum (Bogazici, Turkey) Neil Yorke-Smith (American Uni Beirut / SRI, Lebanon / USA) |



