[agents] DALT Spring School on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies - early registration: March 10, 2011
Paolo Torroni
paolo.torroni at unibo.it
Thu Feb 10 10:45:48 EST 2011
DALT School 2011
First International School on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies
Bertinoro, Italy, April 10-15, 2011 (co-located with ISCL 2011)
http://lia.deis.unibo.it/confs/dalt_school
* EARLY REGISTRATION DEADLINE: MARCH 10, 2011 *
DALT is a well-established forum for researchers interested in sharing
their experiences in combining declarative and formal approaches with
engineering and technology aspects of agents and multi-agent systems.
Building complex agent systems calls for models and technologies that
ensure predictability, allow for the verification of properties, and
guarantee flexibility. Developing technologies that can satisfy these
requirements still poses an important and difficult challenge. Here,
declarative approaches have the potential of offering solutions
satisfying the needs for both specifying and developing multi-agent systems.
Moreover, they are gaining more and more attention in important
application areas such as the semantic web, service-oriented computing,
security, and electronic contracting.
The DALT School builds on the success of 8 editions of the international
AAMAS workshop series. The DALT School aims at giving a comprehensive
introduction to this exciting research domain and disseminate the
results of research achieved in this 9-year-long activity with a
perspective on the future. The school will include sessions dedicated to
PhD students, mentoring activities, focussed discussions and guided
brainstorming.
LECTURERS
Francesca Toni is Reader in Computational Logic in the Department of
Computing at Imperial College London and Leader of the Computational
Logic and Argumentation research group. She has been Principal
Investigator of several EU-funded projects in the areas of logic-based
agents and argumentation. She is one of the main researchers who
developed the KGP model of agency.
Birna van Riemsdijk is Assistant Professor at TU Delft, where she
develops techniques for engineering intelligent software systems that
can support humans in performing complex tasks. Her research focusses on
the use and development of declarative agent programming languages. She
is one of the developers of the GOAL language and a member of the DALT
steering committee.
Peter McBurney is Professor of Computer Science and Head of the ART
group at the University of Liverpool. He has been leading EU-funded
research initiatives and managed many research grants for agent-related
research worldwide and acted as a management consultant for leading IT
and Telecommunications companies. His research focusses on semantics and
pragmatics of agent communication and on multi-agent models of economic
markets and marketing.
Wamberto Vasconcelos is a senior lecturer at the University of Aberdeen,
where he works on intelligent software agents and on knowledge
technologies. He has been involved in several international research
projects on information technologies and service sciences. He is a
member of the steering committee of the Coordination, Organization,
Institutions and Norms workshop series (COIN) and an organizer of the
DALT workshop in 2010 and 2011.
Rafael Bordini is Associate Professor at Universidade Federal do Rio
Grande do Sul. He is one of the main developers of the Jason framework
and author of several books on agent programming. His research interests
cover various aspects of software engineering for autonomous systems,
including programming, modelling, verification, testing, debugging and
application deployment.
ACTIVITIES
The programme will include:
- an introductory lecture to give an overview of the school
- 5 topical courses of 6 hours each
- student sessions with focussed brainstorming and organized mentoring
activities
- a social trip
TARGET AUDIENCE
The school targets graduate students as well as other interested
researchers, from university, government and industry. It will allow
students to get a thorough overview of cutting-edge research and
technologies and get in touch with leading scientists.
The school aims to be truly international with a strong participation
from regions all around the world. This will help students make
connections with international participants and set the base for
potentially long-term cooperations.
An initial list of participants is available on the school Web site.
FINANCIAL AID AND MORE
Grant application is now closed. However, additional support is still
available to AEPIA, APPIA, ACIA, AIxIA and AISB members. Limited
personal subscription to selected journals will be offered by John Wiley
& Sons to all attendees registered before March 25, 2011.
VENUE
The University Residential Center is located in the small medieval
hilltop town of Bertinoro, 50km east of Bologna at an elevation of 230m
above sea level. Bertinoro is easily reachable from Bologna and Forli
airport or train station. The registration includes shuttle bus on April
10 and April 15. Bertinoro is close to many splendid Italian locations
such as Ravenna, Rimini on the Adriatic coast, and the Republic of San
Marino (all within 35km). Bertinoro can also be a base for visiting some
of the better-known Italian locations such as Padua, Ferrara,Venice,
Urbino, Florence and Siena.
LECTURES
Agent and Multi-Agent Software Engineering: Modelling, Programming &
Verification
This course aims at providing an overview of three important parts of
the practical development of multi-agent systems: modelling,
programming, and verification. In particular, we will cover approaches
for multi-agent systems that are based on abstractions, techniques, and
tools that have been specifically tailored for autonomous agents and
multi-agent systems. Besides surveying various approaches that appeared
in the Agents literature for each of the three parts of the development
process, we will focus the concrete examples of the Programming part on
the recently put together JaCaMo platform (Lecturer: Rafael Bordini).
Agent Reasoning: Knowledge, Plans & Flexible Control Cycles
I will present the KGP (Knowledge, Goals and Plan) model of agency. This
model allows the specification of heterogeneous agents that can interact
with each other, and can exhibit both proactive and reactive behaviour
allowing them to function in dynamic environments by adjusting their
goals and plans when changes happen in such environments. The KGP model
provides a highly modular agent architecture that integrates a
collection of reasoning and physical capabilities, synthesised within
transitions that update the agent's state in response to reasoning,
sensing and acting. Transitions are orchestrated by cycle theories that
specify the order in which transitions are executed while taking into
account the dynamic context and agent preferences, as well as selection
operators for providing inputs to transitions. Cycle theories are means
to program the control of agents in a flexible and adaptable manner. I
will also present an argumentative variant of the KGP model, where
reasoning capabilities are supported by argumentation. (Lecturer:
Francesca Toni).
Agent Reasoning: Goals & Preferences
In this course we will investigate how motivational attitudes like
desires, goals and intentions have been and are being used to represent
and program agent reasoning. We will consider both theoretical
approaches for investigating these notions and their interplay, as well
as ways of using these notions to develop cognitive agents. The GOAL
agent programming language in which the notion of goal is important will
be used for illustration. Recent results from empirical studies on how
GOAL is used to program agents that control bots in Unreal Tournament
will be presented. (Lecturer: Birna van Riemsdijk).
Organisation, Coordination & Norms for Multi-Agent Systems
This course will introduce organisation theory concepts for agents and
multi-agent systems; some of these concepts are objectives, roles and
their relations, power, and capabilities, to name a few. We shall then
use organisation concepts to create/synthesise stereotypical agents
which will "embody" aspects of the organisation: these agents will
coordinate efforts in order to find and enact a joint plan to achieve
individual and organisational objectives. We explicitly represent norms,
that is, permissions, prohibitions and obligations, as means to
"fine-tune" the coordination/planning effort, ruling out certain courses
of actions or giving preference/priority to other courses of actions.
The course will make use of the tools and methodology of the EU-funded
ALIVE project. (Lecturer: Wamberto Vasconcelos).
Agent Interaction: Languages, Dialogues & Protocols
In this course we will explore the design and engineering of artificial
communications languages and protocols to enable autonomous, intelligent
software agents to communicate with one another. The design of these
languages and protocols draws on human linguistics, on the philosophy of
language and dialog, on formal logic, and on the theory of computer
programming languages. We will look at the syntax, semantics, and
pragmatics of multi-agent languages and protocols, and consider related
issues such as dynamic (run-time) composition of protocols and the
efficient storage and retrieval of protocols. (Lecturer: Peter McBurney).
FEES
Standard registration is 700 euro until March 10, 2011.
Standard registrations are ALL-INCLUSIVE and cover access to all
lectures and exams, mentoring program and student session, lodging (5
nights) in double room (subject to availability), welcome cocktail,
breakfasts, coffee breaks, lunches and canteen/restaurant dinners,
social trip (including dinner), Internet access. Daily registrations are
also possible, as well as separate fees for accompanying person,
upgrades to single room, and B&B accommodation for early arrivals and
late departures at convenient rates.
SPONSORS
AI Journal, COST Action IC0801 "Agreement Technologies", Foundation for
Intelligent Physical Agents, Spanish Association for AI, Catalan
Association for AI, Portuguese Association for AI, The British Society
for the Study of AI and Simulation of Behaviour, Italian Association for
AI, Italian Association for Logic Programming, SICStus Prolog, John
Wiley & Sons, Bertinoro International Center for Informatics.
ORGANISATION
School Organisers
Paolo Torroni, DEIS, University of Bologna
Andrea Omicini, DEIS, University of Bologna
Student Session Organiser
Federico Chesani, DEIS, University of Bologna
Local Organisers
Marco Prandini, DEIS, University of Bologna
Eleonora Campori, Bertinoro Center for Informatics
Manuela Schiavi, Bertinoro Center for Informatics
INQUIRIES
For all visa-related and administrative concerns such as payment,
registration, lodging, and local logistics, contact Eleonora Campori,
ecampori at ceub.it.
Direct all other inquires to dalt.school.2011 at gmail.com. We will answer
in 2 working days.
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