[agents] PRIMA 2009 - 1st CFP
Valentin Robu
V.Robu at cwi.nl
Tue Feb 17 17:51:29 EST 2009
==================================
1st CALL FOR PAPERS
==================================
The 12th International Conference on Principles of Practice in Multi-Agent
Systems (PRIMA2009).
Nagoya, Japan Dec 14-16, 2009
http://www.prima2009.org/
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INTRODUCTION
=======================================================
PRIMA is the leading scientific conference for research on intelligent
agent systems and multi-agent systems, attracting high quality,
state-of-the-art research from all over the world. The conference
endeavors to bring together researchers, developers, and academic and
industry leaders, active and interested in agents and multi-agent
systems, their practices and related areas. The conference is
specifically focused on becoming the premier forum for prototype and
deployed agent systems. The conference offers an exceptional opportunity
for presentation of original work, technological advances, practical
problems and concerns of the research community.
PRIMA2009 will build on the success of its predecessor workshops and
conferences held in Hanoi, Bangkok, Guilin, Kuala Lumpur, Auckland,
Seoul, Tokyo, Taipei, Melbourne, Kyoto, and Singapore. Since 2007, due to
the need for an additional high-quality forum for international
researchers and practitioners to meet and share their work, the meeting
has been expanded from a workshop to a full-fledged conference.
Agent computing and technology is an exciting, emerging paradigm expected
to play a key role in many society-changing practices from disaster
response to manufacturing to agriculture. Agent and multi-agent
researchers are focused on building working systems that bring together a
broad range of technical areas from market theory to software engineering
to user interfaces. Agent systems are expected to operate in real-world
environments, with all the challenges complex environments present. PRIMA
particularly encourages reports on development of prototype and deployed
agent and multiagent systems and experiments that demonstrate the
capability of agents to handle real-world challenges.
Papers addressing methodological or theoretical aspects or particular
aspects of agent development are also encouraged. A broad range of topics
are of interest but all papers should clearly identify how the
contribution brings the promise of practical multi-agent systems closer
and identify their scientific and/or technical contributions to the PRIMA
community.
The PRIMA demonstration session encourages demonstrations on practice of
prototype and deployed agent and multiagent systems. The PRIMA
demonstration session will be held as a part of the main conference. The
goal of the PRIMA demonstrations is to give participants an opportunity to
present the functionality of their systems, tools and simulations. Authors
of accepted papers to the main conference or the industrial track with a
demonstrable system are strongly encouraged to apply.
For the first time PRIMA is giving authors an option to present their
accepted papers in an interactive session, rather than as a formal oral
presentation. In this interactive session, authors can take time to show
their work either electronically or as a poster and discuss their work in
depth with conference attendees. The interactive session is separate
from the demonstration session and available to any author having a full
paper accepted to the conference. The aim is to give authors the
opportunity to present their work in the most compelling way, to best
share the results of their research. Authors can choose a presentation
type, oral presentation or interactive presentation when submitting their
papers. Regardless of the presentation type, high-quality papers will
not be distinguishable in the proceedings and will be cited identically.
The conference will also feature a doctoral mentoring program, which is
focused on supporting the doctoral students with their research by
providing them peer support. Senior and distinguished researchers
attending the conference are expected to be available for interaction
with the young and promising researchers.
As with previous PRIMA events, there will be tutorials covering a range
of important topics. A special industry track will showcase progress in
the use of real agent systems in important environments.
The conference will be located in Nagoya, at the center of Japan (West of
Tokyo, 2 hours, E of Osaka, 1.5 hours, and E of Kyoto 1 hours by express
train). Nagoya has a castle originally built by the first Tokugawa
shogun, as well as one of Japan's most important Shinto shrines, Atsuta
shrine. The conference site, Nagoya Congress Center, is one of the most
sophisticated and beautiful congress sites in Japan.
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SPECIAL MULTIMEDIA SUBMISSION FORMAT
=======================================================
For some multiagent systems, especially those that aim for broad, useful
functionality, it can be challenging to convey the research contributions
of the world compellingly in a traditional paper format. In recognition
of this, PRIMAâ09, in addition to regular paper submissions, encourages
multimedia (non-paper) electronic submissions of technical contributions.
This is because some valuable researches are difficult to be summarized
as a traditional paper format. For example, Game theory researches can be
summarized in a paper format very well. On the other hand, in particular,
in terms of real dynamic world robotics, a video or a power point file
has much information and impacts. Also, in terms of programming
languages, like a ruby-on-rails video which shows 10-minutes-website
creation, it is very impressive to show it in a video format and source
codes. These submissions can be in whatever electronic format best
conveys the research contributions of the work, from Powerpoint
presentations, to videos, to working code to websites. These submissions
will be reviewed by an experienced group of Multiagent researchers and be
provisionally accepted or rejected. If accepted, authors are required to
submit a âtraditionalâ paper via the normal submission process.
These provisionally accepted papers will be reviewed and then treated
like journal papers âaccepted with revisionsâ â authors must make
changes as suggested by the reviewers and camera ready papers will be
checked to ensure that appropriate changes have been made and the paper
meets high quality standards. Papers accepted via this submission
process will be indistinguishable from ânormalâ papers in the
proceedings. In addition, the electronic submission will be made
available to conference participants via DVD. The aim of this novel
process is to ensure that high-quality Multiagent research is shared with
the community, even in cases where a traditional paper format might not
highlight contributions of the work. Of specific interest under this
submission process are contributions such as:
- Agent based simulation where the space in a paper constrains the large
amount of interesting data that might be generated.
- Tools for building agents or multi-agent systems
- Intelligent, interactive agent-based systems or interfaces, where the
interesting functionality cannot be easily explained in a text format
- Complex, interesting multi-agent behavior that is best shown in a video
format.
- Robotics, humanoids, or intelligent vehicles.
- Enterprise systems based on agents or multi-agent systems
- Web-based agent systems or multi-agent systems
Notice that the criteria for accepting work through this submission
process are still the research aspects of the work. Well engineered, but
not novel or research oriented systems are not encouraged. The aim is
specifically and narrowly to provide a mechanism to get interesting
research shared with the community even when its merit is difficult to
convey in a traditional paper format.
=======================================================
TOPICS OF INTEREST:
=======================================================
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Agent-based system development:
Agent-oriented software engineering
Agent development environments
Agent languages
Case studies and implemented systems
WWW and Semantic Web Agents
Web-based agents
Ontology agents
Semantic Web agents
Internet Bots
Human Agent Interaction
Agent-based simulations:
Emergent behavior Simulation-specific issues Learning:
Learning (single and multi-agent)
Computational architectures for learning Evolution, adaptation
Agent Reasoning:
Reasoning (single and multi-agent)
Planning (single and multi-agent)
Cognitive models
Ontological reasoning
Interface Agents:
Practices of Interface Agents
Interface Multi-Agents
Virtual Agents
Collaborative Interface Agents
Autonomous Interface Agents
Agent societies and social networks:
Artificial social systems
Trust and reputation
Social and organizational structure
Privacy, safety and security
Ethical and legal issues
Agent communication:
Communication languages
Communication protocols
Agent commitments
Network structures and analysis
Agent Cooperation and Negotiation:
Teamwork
Cooperation
Coalition formation
Coordination
Distributed problem solving
Formal models for modeling other agents and self
Argumentation
Negotiation and Bargaining
Persuasion
Agent Systems:
Software agents
Mobile agents
Agent-Based Assistants
Agent-Based Virtual Enterprise
Embodied Agents and Agent-Based Systems Applications
Socially Situated Planning Software and Pervasive Agents
Real-world Robotics:
Coordination in multi-robot systems
Modeling and analysis of multi-robot systems
Tools that are relevant for multi-robot studies
Applications of multi-robot systems to real-world problems
Other Related Areas:
Collective intelligence
Service science
P2P, Grid computing
Financial markets and algorithm trades
Ubiquitous computing, ambient intelligence
Programming Languages
Knowledge and Data Intensive Systems
Perceptive Animated Interfaces
Scalability
Tools and Standards
Ubiquitous Software Services
Virtual Humans
The conference also welcomes relevant papers from related fields as long
as the link is made to relevance and work within the agent community.
=======================================================
Demonstration Session:
=======================================================
The PRIMA demonstration session encourages demonstrations on practice of
prototype and deployed agent and multiagent systems. The PRIMA
demonstration session will be held as a part of the main conference. The
goal of the PRIMA demonstrations is to give participants an opportunity to
present their latest practices on agent and multiagent systems. Authors of
accepted papers to the main conference or the industrial track with a
demonstrable system are strongly encouraged to apply.
=======================================================
Interactive Session:
=======================================================
The PRIMA interactive session is giving authors an option to present their
accepted papers in an interactive session, rather than as a formal oral
presentation. In this interactive session, authors can take time to show
their work either electronically or as a poster and discuss their work in
depth with conference attendees. The interactive session is separate from
the demonstration session and available to any author having a full paper
accepted to the conference. The aim is to give authors the opportunity to
present their work in the most compelling way, to best share the results
of their research. Authors can choose a presentation type, oral
presentation or interactive presentation when submitting their papers.
Regardless of the presentation type, high-quality papers will not be
distinguishable in the proceedings and be will be cited identically.
=======================================================
Industrial Practices Session (Industrial Track) :
=======================================================
The PRIMA Conference Industry Track is dedicated to collect, present and
discuss contributions reporting on industrial and commercial deployment of
software agent technologies and practices. If you are working to
commercialize agent technologies, or developing real-world practices based
on the agent technologies, you are invited to submit papers on your
current works.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Experiences gained from commercialization attempts
Investment analysis of agent technologies
Insights into markets appropriate for agent technologies
Commercial application of agents
Application case studies
Practices on agent-based e-government
Practices on agent-based automation and logistics
Practices on agent-based telecommunication, media and entertainment
Practices on agent-based healthcare systems
Practices on agent-based smart living, ambient intelligence.
Practices on biotechnology
Practices on monitoring and maintenance, and surveillance
Practices on managing large scale infrastructures
Practices on software development
Other practices of agents, such as in the non-profit sector
Barriers to adoption or adoption facilitators
=======================================================
PUBLICATION:
=======================================================
All accepted papers are going to be published from IEEE (approval pending).
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IMPORTANT DATES:
=======================================================
Multimedia format submissions due: July 3rd, 2009(Fri)
Multimedia format submissions author notification: July 17th, 2009 (Fri)
Papers due: July 31st, 2009 (Fri)
Author notification: September 15th, 2009 (Tue)
Camera-ready papers due: September 30th, 2009 (Wed)
Early registration deadline: October 16th, 2009 (Fri)
Registration deadline: December 1, 2009 (Tue)
Conference dates: December 14 - 16, 2009 (Mon - Wed)
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SPECIAL EVENTS:
=======================================================
- Doctoral Mentoring Session
- Agent School
- RoboCup
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ORGANIZATION:
=======================================================
General Chairs:
Jung-Jin Yang (Catholic Univ. of Korea, Korea),
Makoto Yokoo (Kyushu Univ., Japan)
Program Chairs:
Takayuki Ito (NIT/MIT, Japan/US),
Zhi JIN (Peking Univ., China),
Paul Scerri (CMU, US)
Industry Track Program Chairs:
Satoshi Kurihara (Osaka Univ., Japan),
Minjie Zhang (U. Wollongong, Australia)
Publicity Cochairs:
Shigeo Matsubara (Kyoto Univ., Japan)
Tony Bastin Roy Savarimuthu (New Zealand)
Sponsorship Chairs:
Nirmit V Desai (IBM, India),
Akihiko Ohusuga (Japan)
Tutorial / Interactive session Chair:
Tsunenori Mine (Kyushu Univ., Japan)
Buy The Duy (Vietnam)
Workshop Chair:
Quan Bai (CSIRO, Australia)
Naoki Fukuta (Shizuoka Univ., Japan)
Financial Chair:
Tokuro Matsuo (Yamagata Univ., Japan)
Valentin Robu (Univ. of Southampton, England)
Publications Chair:
Takahiro Uchiya (Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan)
Gita Sukthankar (U. Florida, US)
Agent School & Doctoral Mentoring Track Chair:
Hiromitsu Hattori (Kyoto Univ., Japan)
Jane Hsu (Taiwan)
Local Arrangement Chair:
Hirofumi Yamaki (Nagoya Univ., Japan)
Shohey Kato (Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan)
Agent Event Chair: (RobuCup)
Itsuki Noda (AIST, Japan)
Xiaoping Chen, (USTC, China)
Oliver Obst, (CSIRO, Australia)
Advisory committee members:
Toru Ishida (Japan),
Hideyuki Nakashima (Japan),
Chengqi Zhang (Australia),
Muninder P. Singh (US),
Alexis Drogoul (France),
Von Won Soo (Taiwan),
R. Sadananda (Thailand)
--
Valentin Robu
CWI, Center for Mathematics and Computer Science
Kruislaan 413, NL-1098 SJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Email: Valentin.Robu at cwi.nl
Web: http://homepages.cwi.nl/~robu
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