[agents] Extended Deadline: AAAI-16 Workshop on Multiagent Interaction without Prior Coordination (MIPC 2016)
Stefano V. Albrecht
s.v.albrecht at sms.ed.ac.uk
Mon Oct 19 05:01:34 EDT 2015
*Extended submission deadline: _15 November_ (after AAAI-16 notification)
**Plus:**
** - Invited talks by Michael Bowling and Gal Kaminka**
** - We are planning a discussion panel on "Drop-in player challenge"
at RoboCup*
*Call for Papers*
Third AAAI-Workshop on Multiagent Interaction without Prior Coordination
(MIPC 2016)
13 February 2016, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
http://mipc.inf.ed.ac.uk/2016
*Description*
This workshop focuses on models and algorithms for multiagent
interaction without prior coordination (MIPC). Interaction between
agents is the defining attribute of multiagent systems, encompassing
problems of planning in a decentralized setting, learning other agent
models, composing teams with high task performance, and selected
resource-bounded communication and coordination. There is significant
variety in methodologies used to solve such problems, including symbolic
reasoning about negotiation and argumentation, distributed optimization
methods, machine learning methods such as multiagent reinforcement
learning, etc. The majority of these well-studied methods depend on some
form of prior coordination. Often, the coordination is at the level of
problem definition. For example, learning algorithms may assume that all
agents share a common learning method or prior beliefs, distributed
optimization methods may assume specific structural constraints
regarding the partition of state space or cost/rewards, and symbolic
methods often make strong assumptions regarding norms and protocols. In
realistic problems, these assumptions are easily violated – calling for
new models and algorithms that specifically address the case of ad hoc
interactions. Similar issues are also becoming increasingly more
pertinent in human-machine interactions, where there is a need for
intelligent adaptive behaviour and assumptions regarding prior knowledge
and communication are problematic.
Effective MIPC is most likely to be achieved as we bring together work
from many different areas, including work on intelligent agents, machine
learning, game theory, and operations research. For instance, game
theorists have considered what happens to equilibria when common
knowledge assumptions must be violated, agent designers are faced with
mixed teams of humans and agents in open environments and developing
variations on planning methods in response to this, etc. The goal of
this workshop is to bring together these diverse viewpoints in an
attempt to consolidate the common ground and identify new lines of attack.
This workshop is the third edition of the MIPC workshop series,
previously held at AAAI-15 in Austin, Texas, USA, and AAAI-14 in Quebec
City, Canada.
*Topics*
The workshop will discuss research related to multiagent interaction
without prior coordination, as outlined in the workshop description
above. A non-exclusive list of relevant topics includes:
- Agent coordination and cooperation without prior coordination
- Learning and adaptation in multiagent systems without prior coordination
- Team formation and information sharing in ad hoc teamwork settings
- Human-machine interaction without prior coordination
- Teammate/opponent modelling and plan recognition without prior
coordination
- Game theory/incomplete information applied to ad hoc agent coordination
- Empirical and theoretical investigations of issues arising from prior
assumptions
- Ad hoc coordination in the presence of adversaries
*Format*
The one-day workshop will include keynote talks from invited speakers,
sessions of oral workshop paper presentations, and an “open problems and
discussion” session.
*Submission*
The workshop follows the formatting guidelines for standard paper
submissions to the AAAI-16 main track. Workshop papers can be submitted
via EasyChair and will be selected based on a single-blind peer review
process.
*Talk-Only Option*
We offer a talk-only option for authors of relevant papers that have
been published in journals or conference proceedings. Interested authors
are encouraged to send their paper (in PDF or PS format) and publication
details via e-mail to mipc2016 at easychair.org. If the paper is deemed
relevant for the workshop, we will allocate a presentation slot for the
authors in the workshop program.
*Journal Special Issue*
The Journal of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems plans to
publish a special issue on Multiagent Interaction without Prior
Coordination (http://mipc.inf.ed.ac.uk/journal). While the MIPC workshop
is primarily a venue for early ideas and discussion, the special issue
is a platform for more developed ("mature") work. We encourage authors
of MIPC workshops to submit extended versions of their workshop papers
to the special issue. (Note that there will be no special treatment for
authors of MIPC workshops.)
*Organising Committee*
Program chairs:
- Stefano Albrecht (University of Edinburgh)
- Katie Genter (University of Texas at Austin)
- Somchaya Liemhetcharat (A*STAR Singapore)
Advisory committee:
- Subramanian Ramamoorthy (University of Edinburgh)
- Peter Stone (University of Texas at Austin)
- Manuela Veloso (Carnegie Mellon University)
*Further Information*
For more information, please visit the workshop website at
http://mipc.inf.ed.ac.uk/2016
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