[agents] CFP: Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations (ACAN'09) - Extended Deadline
Valentin Robu
V.Robu at cwi.nl
Mon Feb 9 04:44:10 EST 2009
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ACAN 2009 Call for Papers.
The Second International Workshop on
Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations (ACAN09).
To be held in conjunction with
the Eighth International Joint Conference on Autonomous and Multi-Agent
Systems (AAMAS 2009),
10-15 May 2009
http://www-itolab.mta.nitech.ac.jp/ACAN2009/
Submission page:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=acan2009
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DEADLINE EXTENDED!
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* FEBRUARY 15, 2009 - Submission of contributions to workshop (EXTENDED)
* MARCH 1, 2009 - Workshop paper acceptance notification
* MAY 10 and 11 - Workshop takes place in conjunction with AAMAS 2009
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Scope and Background
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Complex Automated Negotiations have been widely studied and are becoming
an important, emerging area in the field of Autonomous Agents and
Multi-Agent Systems. In general, automated negotiations can be complex,
since there are a lot of factors that characterize such negotiations.
These factors include the number of issues, dependency between issues,
representation of utility, negotiation protocol, negotiation form
(bilateral or multi-party), time constraints, etc. Software agents can
support automation or simulation of such complex negotiations on the
behalf of their owners, and can provide them with adequate bargaining
strategies. In many multi-issue bargaining settings, negotiation becomes
more than a zero-sum game, so bargaining agents have an incentive to
cooperate in order to achieve efficient win-win agreements. Also, in a
complex negotiation, there could be multiple issues that are
interdependent. Thus, agent's utility will become more complex than simple
utility functions. Further, negotiation forms and protocols could be
different between bilateral situations and multi-party situations. To
realize such a complex automated negotiation, we have to incorporate
advanced Artificial Intelligence technologies includes search, CSP,
graphical utility models, Bays nets, auctions, utility graphs, predicting
and learning methods. Applications could include e-commerce tools,
decision-making support tools, negotiation support tools, collaboration
tools, etc. We solicit papers on all aspects of such complex automated
negotiations in the field of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems,
including but not limited to:
- Complex Negotiations
- Multi-Issue Negotiations
- Concurrent Negotiations
- Multiple Negotiations
- Sequential Negotiations
- Bilateral Negotiations
- Multilateral negotiation
- Negotiation and Coordination Mechanisms
- Negotiation under Asymmetric Information
- Large Scale Negotiation
- Matchmaking and Brokering Mechanisms
- Coordination for Local and Global Consistency
- 2-sided Matching
- Predicting Opponent's Behaviours in Negotiation.
- Utility models and Preference models
- Complexity aspects of Multi-issue negotiation
- Negotiation Simulation
- Negotiations in Social Networks
- Preference Elicitation
- Practices
These issues are being explored by researchers from different communities
in Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent systems. They are, for instance,
being studied in agent negotiation, multi-issue negotiations, auctions,
mechanism design, electronic commerce, voting, secure protocols,
matchmaking & brokering, argumentation, and co-operation mechanisms. The
goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers from these
communities to learn about each other's approaches, form long-term
collaborations, and cross-fertilize the different areas to accelerate
progress towards scaling up to larger and more realistic applications.
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Important dates
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* FEBRUARY 15, 2009 - Submission of contributions to workshop (EXTENDED)
* MARCH 1, 2009 - Workshop paper acceptance notification
* MAY 10 and 11 - Workshop takes place in conjunction with AAMAS 2009
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Submission
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Submission page:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=acan2009
The workshop welcomes submissions of original works relevant to the topics
described above. This year, the workshop will accept submissions of both
full papers (maximum 8 pages) and short papers (maximum 4 pages).
For gathering high quality papers, each paper needs to be reviewed by at
least two PC members or experts in the field. Acceptance standards
include its technical soundness, novelty, impact and readability. Also, we
will assume that papers accepted should have full-paper quality with small
revisions for special issue in a journal.
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Organization
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Organization Chairs
Takayuki Ito (Massachustts Institute of Technology, US / Nagoya Institute
of Technology, Japan)
Minjie Zhang (University of Wollongong, Australia)
Valentin Robu (National Center for Mathematics and Computer Science, the
Netherlands)
Shaheen Fatima (Loughborough University, England)
Tokuro Matsuo (Yamagata University, Japan)
Naoki Fukuta (Shizuoka University, Japan)
Hirofumi Yamaki (Nagoya University, Japan)
Program Committee
Hiromitsu Hattori (Kyoto University, Japan)
Mark Klein (Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), United States)
Brahim Chaib-draa (Laval University, Canada)
Joaquin Delgado (Yahoo, inc., United States)
Wei Li (Central Queensland University, Australia)
Katia Sycara (Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), United States)
Paul Scerri (Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), United States)
Zili Zhang (Deakin University, Australia)
Guoming Lai (Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), United State)
Miniar Hemaissia (THALES Research & Technology France, France)
Miquel Angel Lopez Carmona (University of Alcala, Spain)
Marsa Maestre Ivan (University of Alcala, Spain)
Catholijn Jonker (Technical University of Delft, The Netherlands)
Koen Hindriks (Technical University of Delft, The Netherlands)
Pedro Szekely (USC/ISI, United States)
Lotzi Boloni (University Florida, United States)
Kate Larson (University of Waterloo, Canada)
--
Valentin Robu
CWI, Center for Mathematics and Computer Science
Kruislaan 413, NL-1098 SJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Phone: +31 20 592 4102, Fax: +31 20 592 4199
Web: http://homepages.cwi.nl/~robu
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