[agents] CFP: Human-Agent Interaction Workshop at AAMAS 2015

Sarvapali Ramchurn sdr1 at soton.ac.uk
Tue Jan 6 07:21:17 EST 2015


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Preliminary Call for Papers

 Fourth International Workshop on
Human-Agent Interaction Design and Models (HAIDM 2015)
(4th or 5th of May).

      (www.haidm.wordpress.com<http://www.haidm.wordpress.com>)

          co-located with AAMAS 2015, Istanbul, Turkey
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Workshop Goals
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As the boundaries of autonomous agents and multi-agent systems continue to expand, there is an increasing need for agents to interact with humans.  In fact, the field of multi-agent systems has matured from conceptual models to applications within the real-world (e.g., energy and sustainability, disaster management, or health care).  One significant challenge that arises when transitioning these conceptual models to applications is addressing the inevitable human interaction.  To this end, this workshop examines major challenges at the intersection of human-agent systems. In particular, we focus on the challenges of designing and modelling human-agent interaction. While the former takes a human-centric view of human-agent systems and focuses on the design of human-agent coordination mechanisms, trust issues in human-agent interaction, interaction techniques, and human activity recognition, the latter is concerned with finding better models of human behaviour in a variety of settings so that autonomous and multi-agent systems can appropriately interact with human agents (e.g., agent-human negotiation strategies or health care agents encouraging physical therapy for a variety of recovering patients).

The workshop is in its fourth edition and previously accepted papers at HAIDM were invited to submit to a special issue on Human-Agent Interaction in the Journal of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems (JAAMAS) which is to appear in 2015. We hope to secure a similar venue for publication of high-quality HAIDM papers for dissemination to a wider audience.

Topics Covered
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- Flexible autonomy – how should the delegation of tasks to agents be performed such that the right degree of autonomy be given to individual agents or teams of such agents to optimise the performance of tasks by a human controller or to support  activities of teams of humans interacting with (teams of) agents.

- Trust between humans and agents – when humans delegate tasks to agents or vice-versa, they need to be able to capture the uncertainty in the other party being able to correctly complete tasks or activities. Such uncertainty may be modelled using  past interactions (trust) or information gathered from other agents (reputation). Developing effective trust and reputation models and mechanisms for human-agent interaction is therefore key to establishing long term relationships between humans and agents.

- Presentation and interaction techniques – to allow users to understand and modify the actions of large collections of agents as they reason and act on behalf of users.

-  Smart society applications including energy systems, ridesharing, healthcare augmentation, disaster response where agents and humans need to cooperate/coordinate to achieve joint objectives to solve problems involving issues of scale, spatial distribution, and heterogeneity in the capabilities available given to the actors in the system.

- Coalition formation and optimisation models involving models of agents and humans.

- Human-Robot Interaction: the design of embodied agents for believability and trust as well as methods for human-robot coordination.

- Crowdsourcing: models, algorithms and techniques for effective problem solving in crowdsourcing including social incentives, micro-payments for micro-tasks, learning about workers and tasks, task allocation, collaborative problem solving and novel applications. The focus should be on combining machine and human intelligence in crowdsourcing.

- Citizen science: the use of agent-based techniques to facilitate citizen scientists to contribute to the solution of scientific problems in platforms such as Zooniverse, Foldit and eBird, including studies of motivation, incentives, quality control and task allocation.

- Use of agent-based coordination algorithms to coordinate humans.

- Enhanced models of human behaviour and theory of human behaviour

- Comparison of approaches in applying models of human behaviour (e.g., bounded rational or psychological models)

- Applications of human behaviour models

- Cooperative and competitive agent-human systems

- Behavioural game theory

- Techniques for learning human behaviour (e.g., machine learning, crowdsourcing, and human computation)

- Benchmarks and evaluation methodologies for evaluating agent-human interactions

- Quantitative and qualitative studies of human-agent interaction (or agent-supported human activities) in the lab, online and in real-world settings

Important Dates
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11th February: Submission deadline

10th March: Notifications

19th March: Deadline for Camera-Ready copies


Submission Procedure
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Submissions should conform to the LNCS Springer format,  Authors are encouraged to use the style file found here  or see http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0for more details.

Submissions may be of two types:

• Long papers: These are full-length research papers detailing work in progress or work that could potentially be published at a major conference. These should not be more than *16* pages long in the LNCS format above.
• Short papers: These are position papers or demo papers that describe either a project on human-agent systems, an application that has not yet been evaluated, or initial work. These should not be more than *8* pages long (excluding appendices and assuming the LNCS format above).
Authors can submit their papers through the HAIDM 2015 Easychair submission site which will be advertised in the full CFP.

Programme Committee
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TBA

Organising Committee
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Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, University of Southampton, UK
Avi Rosenfeld, Jerusalem College of Technology, Israel
Kobi Gal, Ben Gurion University, Israel
Ece Kamar, Microsoft Research (Redmond), USA
Joel Fischer, University of Nottingham, UK


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