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Subject:

Workshop on Multiagent and Multiagent-based Simulation at AAMAS'04 ...

From:

Brian Logan <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Brian Logan <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 23 Jan 2004 14:30:21 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (188 lines)

First Call for Papers:

Joint Workshop on Multi-Agent and Multi-Agent-Based Simulation
==============================================================

To be held at Columbia University in New York City, USA on
July 19 or 20, 2004.
http://www.agents.cs.nott.ac.uk/events/mamabs04

Co-located with the Third International Joint Conference on Autonomous
Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS'2004).
http://satchmo.cs.columbia.edu/aamas04

Aims and Scope
--------------

There has been considerable recent progress in modeling and analyzing
multi-agent systems (MAS), and in techniques that apply MAS models to
complex real world systems such as social systems and organizations.
Simulation is an increasingly important strand that weaves together this
work.  In high-risk, high-cost situations, simulations provide critical
cost/benefit leverage, and make possible explorations that cannot be
carried out in-situ:

* Multi-agent approaches to simulating complex systems (often referred
to as Multi-Agent Based Simulation or "MABS") is a key tool in
inter-disciplinary studies of social systems. Agent-based social
simulation (ABSS) research simulates and synthesizes social behavior in
order to understand real social systems with properties of
self-organization, scalability, robustness and openness.

* In the MAS community, simulation has been applied to a wide range of
MAS research and design problems from models of complex individual
agents employing sophisticated internal mechanisms to models of large
scale societies of relatively simple agents which focus more on the
interactions between agents.

* For the simulation community, MAS-based approaches provide a new way
of organising and managing large scale simulations (e.g., GRID-based
simulations), and agent simulation presents a challenging new domain
requiring the development of new theory and techniques.

This workshop concerns agent simulation construed broadly, from
multi-agent approaches to simulating complex systems, to the simulation
of part or all of a multi-agent system and the hard technical issues of
multi-agent simulation itself. Contemporary directions in both MABS and
MAS research present significant challenges to existing simulation tools
and methods, such as concepts and tools for modeling complex social
systems and environments; scalability (to thousands or millions of
large-grain agents); heterogeneity of simulation components and modeled
agents; visualisation and steering of simulation behaviour; validation
of models and results; human-in-the-loop issues; and more. The workshop
will provide a forum for social scientists, agent researchers and
developers and simulation researchers to assess the current state of the
art in the modelling and simulation of social systems and MAS, identify
where existing approaches can be successfully applied, learn about new
approaches and explore future research challenges.

A General topics

* Agent and environment models to support simulation
* Standards for simulators including inter-operability
* Agent and agent-based simulation on the GRID
* Scalability issues
* Synchronisation approaches

B MAS Simulation Infrastructure

* Parallel and distributed simulation of MAS
* Tools, environments and kernels for simulating MAS
* Data collection and analysis (e.g., monitoring, visualisation)
* MAS simulation languages and formalisms (e.g., DEVS, petri nets)
* Combined approaches to verification of MAS (e.g., combining
  simulation with formal and/or empirical verification)

C Multi-Agent Based Simulation

* Formal and agent-based models of social behaviour
* Applications of MABS
* The use of MABS to understand complex dynamics
* Emergence as an MAS programming paradigm
* New tools and methodologies for MABS
* Social structures and norms as tools for designing MAS

The workshop is in part a continuation of the International Workshop
series on Multi Agent Based Simulation (MABS). More information about
MABS can be found at http://www.pcs.usp.br/~mabs.


Target Audience
---------------

The workshop will be of interest to researchers in the modelling
and analysis of multi-agent systems, and researchers who are
interested in applying agent-based simulation techniques to
real-world problems.


Important dates
---------------

Submission deadline:                  April 1
Notification of acceptance:           May 1
Final pre-workshop version deadline:  May 20
Workshop event:                       July 19/20


Publication
-----------

All accepted papers will be printed in the worskhop proceedings. In
addition, following the tradition of the previous MABS workshops selected
papers will be revised and published by Springer in the LNCS
series. Preliminary schedule of the post-proceedings process:

Second reviewing:                     September
Revised camera-ready papers deadline: October
Publication:                          December


Submission Guidelines
---------------------

A PDF file containing the paper should be e-mailed to
[log in to unmask] by the 1st of April 2004. The paper must be in
Springer LNCS format (see http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html) and
no more than 10 pages.


Organizing Committee
--------------------

Paul Davidsson (Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden)
Les Gasser (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Brian Logan (University Nottingham, UK)
Keiki Takadama (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)


Program Committee
-----------------

Robert Axtell (The Brookings Institution, USA)
Georgios Theodoropoulos (University of Birmingham, UK)
Lin Uhrmacher (University of Rostock, Germany)

Gul Agha (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
John Anderson (University of Manitoba, Canada)
Rafael Bordini (University of Liverpool, UK)
Francois Bousquet (CIRAD/IRRI, Thailand)
Christopher D. Carothers (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA)
Shu-Heng Chen (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
Claudio Cioffi-Revilla (George Mason University, USA)
Helder Coelho (University of Lisbon, Portugal)
Rosaria Conte (IP/CNR Rome, Italy)
Nick Collier (PantaRei LLC/Argonne National Lab, USA)
Daniel Corkill (University of Massachusetts, USA)
Nuno David (ISCTE, Lisbon, Portugal)
Bruce Edmonds (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
Richard Fujimoto (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
Nigel Gilbert (University of Surrey, UK)
Nick Gotts (Macaulay Institute, Scotland, UK)
David Hales (University of Bologna, Italy)
Matt Hare (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Rainer Hegselmann (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
Wander Jager (University of Groningen, Netherlands)
Marco Janssen (Indiana University, USA)
Christophe Le Page (CIRAD, France)
Scott Moss (University of Manchester, UK)
Akira Namatame (National Defense Academy, Japan)
Emma Norling (University of Melbourne, Australia)
Michael North (Argonne National Laboratory, USA)
Mario Paolucci, (IP/CNR Rome, Italy)
Alexander Pretschner (Technische  Universitt Mnchen, Germany)
Patrick Riley (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Juliette Rouchier (Greqam (CNRS), France)
Keith Sawyer (Washington University in St. Louis, USA)
Matthias Scheutz (University of Notre Dame, USA)
Jaime Sichman (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil)
Liz Sonenberg (University Melbourne, Australia)
Takao Terano (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
Klaus Troitzsch (University of Koblenz, Germany)
Carl Tropper (McGill University, Canada)
Stephen Turner (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)
Harko Verhagen (Stockholm University, Sweden)
Manuela M. Veloso (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Regis Vincent (SRI International, USA)
Philip A. Wilsey (University of Cincinnati, USA)

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