[agents] CfP- International Workshop on Conflict Resolution in Decision Making - IJCAI 2017 Workshop

Reyhan Aydogan reyhan.aydogan at gmail.com
Tue Apr 18 13:52:05 EDT 2017


*We apologize for multiple copies. Please distribute this CFP among your
colleagues and
students-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2nd Call for Papers COREDEMA - 3rd International Workshop on Conflict
Resolution in Decision Making In conjunction with the International Joint
Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-2017). 19-21 August
2017Melbourne, Australia http://ii.tudelft.nl/coredema2017/
<http://ii.tudelft.nl/coredema2017/>*





























*We apologize for multiple copies. Please distribute this CFP among your
colleagues and
students-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Papers COREDEMA - 3rd International Workshop on Conflict
Resolution in Decision Making In conjunction with the International Joint
Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-2017). 19-21 August
2017Melbourne, Australia http://ii.tudelft.nl/coredema2017/
<http://ii.tudelft.nl/coredema2017/>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SPECIAL ISSUE We intend to organize a special issue in an international
journal depending on the number of the high quality submissions. This year,
we invited all accepted papers in COREDEMA 2016 to submit their extensions
to a special issue in Group Decision and Negotiation . You can find the
information regarding this special issue in the following link: -
http://static.springer.com/sgw/documents/1597801/application/pdf/AIT+for+CR.PDF
<http://static.springer.com/sgw/documents/1597801/application/pdf/AIT+for+CR.PDF>We
are contacting Springer for the post-proceedings of the COREDEMA 2017. The
previous years, the post-proceedings have been published in Lecture Notes
series by Springer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IMPORTANT DATES Paper submission deadline: 8 May, 2017 Notification date: 8
June, 2017 Final version submission deadline: 15 June, 2017 Workshop date:
19-21 August,
2017--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE MEMBERS - Reyhan Aydogan (Ozyegin University, Turkey &
TU Delft, The Netherlands) - Tim Baarslag (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica,
Amsterdam, The Netherlands) - Enrico Gerding (University of Southampton,
United Kingdom) - Takayuki Ito (Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan)-
Catholijn M. Jonker (TU Delft, The Netherlands) - Vicente Julián
(Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain) - Victor Sanchez-Anguix
(Coventry University, United Kingdom)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Today’s
world is social and complex in nature. Societies have evolved and many
problems faced by individuals can no longer be solved in solitude. We
require cooperation with others to pursue our own goals, in many complex
scenarios like politics and businesses, as well as in our day to day life.
As we all hold different goals and interests, conflict emerges as a natural
part of our lives. Successful cooperations require solving conflicts among
interested parties. The importance of conflict resolution has driven
research in many fields like anthropology, psychology, mathematics,
biology, and lately, in artificial intelligence. Despite their
diametrically different approaches, the goal of these disciplines has
always revolved around either solving conflict or helping us to understand
conflicts and ways to resolve them in a more thorough way. This can be
explained not only from our need to cooperate across the globe, but also
from the global importance of avoiding escalation and, therefore, from
striving for a better society.The focus of this workshop is on theoretical
and practical computational approaches for solving and understanding
conflict resolution. These computational approaches may be inspired by a
wide variety of disciplines such as the anthropology, psychology, economy,
biology, statistics, mathematics, and computer science itself. Indeed, one
of the goals of this workshop is to allow researchers from different
disciplines to discuss their perspectives on conflict resolution. We
particularly emphasize the role of computational models and applications of
conflict resolution in relation to decision making and action selection.
 Submissions should propose, use or analyze computational models of
conflict resolution in relation to action selection or decision making for
detecting and / or resolving conflicts between - software entities
(inter-agent or intra-agent),- software entities and humans,- humans
facilitated by computational models and tools,We welcome papers on
applications and theoretical approaches that can be based on the following
or other topics:- Negotiation: automated negotiation and / or negotiation
support - Decision Support Systems- Argumentation- Social science approach
to conflict resolutions- Biology and animal approach to conflict
resolution- Computational models for conflict resolution- Emotion, Trust,
Reputation and its effect on conflict resolution - Data science and
conflict resolution- Social Simulation- Social Choice- Preference Modeling
and Aggregation- Agent/Robot Action Selection - Computer Supported
Cooperative Work - Game Theory & Experimental EconomicsBest regards, Reyhan
Aydogan <reyhan.aydogan at ozyegin.edu.tr <reyhan.aydogan at ozyegin.edu.tr>>On
behalf of the organization committee Reyhan Aydogan (Ozyegin University,
Turkey)Tim Baarslag (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands)Enrico Gerding (University of Southampton, UK)Takayuki Ito
(Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan)Catholijn Jonker (TU Delft, The
Netherlands)Vicente Julian (Universitat Politecnica de Valencia,
Spain)Victor Sanchez-Anguix (Coventry University, UK)*


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