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Subject:

Final Call for Participation - NorMAS2005

From:

Harko Verhagen <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Harko Verhagen <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Thu, 24 Mar 2005 15:00:17 +0100

Content-Type:

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[ Our apologies for multiple copies. ]


======================================================================


Final Call for Participation

1st International Symposium on Normative Multiagent Systems (NorMAS2005)

NorMAS2005 is a two day symposium part of the 2005 AISB convention. The 
general theme for the AISB 2005 convention is "Social Intelligence and 
Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents". It is held from April 12 to 
April 2005 at the University of Hertfordshire, de Havilland Campus, 
Hatfield, England. AISB conventions are organized by the largest AI society 
in the United Kingdom, SSAISB which stands for Society of the Study of 
Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour. NorMAS2005 will 
take place on Tuesday, April 12th and Wednesday, April 13th.

Description of NorMAS

Norms are essential for artificial agents that are to display behaviour 
comparable to human intelligent behaviour or collaborate with humans, 
because the use of norms is the key of human social intelligence. Norms play 
a central role in many social phenomena such as coordination, cooperation, 
decision-making, etc. There is an increasing interest in the role of norms 
in societies, both inside as outside the agent community. Now the time is 
ripe for a symposium focussing on this central sociological concept given 
that the field of (multi)agent research is moving more and more from the 
individual, cognitive focussed agent models to models of socially situated 
agents. NorMAS therefore focuses on normative multiagent systems.

Normative multiagent systems combine theories and frameworks for normative 
systems with multiagent systems. Thus, these systems provide a promising 
model for human and artificial agent co-ordination, because they integrate 
norms and individual intelligence. They are a prime example of the use of 
sociological theories in multiagent systems, and therefore of the relation 
between agent theory and the social sciences, e.g., sociology, philosophy, 
economics, legal science, etc.

NorMAS2005, as part of AISB2005, will provide an excellent opportunity to 
meet researchers studying norms in cognitive science, social sciences, agent 
theory, computer science, philosophy, etc. to discuss the current state and 
identify potential future directions and research issues.

TOPICS OF INTEREST

The topics of this symposium include, but are not restricted to, the 
following issues:

    * multiagent or society level:
          o balancing dynamics and statics at the agent (micro) and agent 
society (macro) level
          o coordination based on normative multiagent systems
          o emergence of conventions, norms, roles, and normative multiagent 
systems
          o combining conventions with regulative, permissive, constitutive 
and other types of norms
          o relation between NorMAS and contracts, security, and 
(electronic) institutions
    * agent level:
          o alternatives to and extensions of the homo economicus and BDI 
logics
          o extending logical frameworks to encompass norms in agent 
decision making
          o how to implement theories of norms in artificial agents
    * applications of NorMAS:
          o multiagent social simulation models containing norms
          o mixing artificial and human agents in hybrid social systems

Final schedule NorMAS2005

Tuesday, April 12

8.30 9.00 registration

9.00 9.10 welcome etc.

9.10 10.10 Plenary AISB talk: Nigel Gilbert: Computational Sociology

10.10 10:45 coffee-break

10:45 11.15 Introduction to Normative Multiagent Systems - Harko Verhagen

11.15 12.00 Towards Norm-Governed Self-Organising Networks - Lloyd Kamara, 
Jeremy Pitt, and Marek Sergot

12.00 12.45 Beyond BDI? Brandomian commitments for multi-agent 
communication - Rodger Kibble

12:45 14.00 lunch

14.00 15:00 My Agents Love to Conform: Emotions, Norms, and Social Control 
in Natural and Artificial Societies - Christian von Scheve, Daniel Moldt, 
Julia Fix, and Rolf von Lüde

15:00 16:00 A Normative Framework for Agent-Based Systems - Fabiola López y 
Lopéz, Michael Luck, and Mark d'Inverno

16:00 16.30 coffee-break

16.30 17:15 Normative KGP Agents: A Preliminary Report - Fariba Sadri, 
Kostas Stathis, and Francesca Toni

17:15 18:00 Discussion on Normative Agent Systems

18:00  AISB: Reception, finger buffet

Wednesday, April 13

9.00 10.00 Plenary AISB talk: Jacqueline Nadel: Looking at the many faces of 
human socio-cognitive development: can it help designing 'social' robots?

10.00 10.30 coffee-break

10.30 11.10 Increasing Software Infrastructure Dependability through a Law 
Enforcement Approach - Gustavo Carvalho, Rodrigo Paes, Ricardo Choren, Paulo 
Alencar, and Carlos Lucena

11.10 11.50 Self-Organized Criticality and Norm Avalanches - Matthew J. 
Hoffmann

11.50 12:30 Formalizing Coalition Structures via Obligations - Luigi Sauro

12:30 13:45 lunch

13:45 14:25 A Framework for the Design of Self-Regulation of Open 
Agent-based Electronic Marketplaces - Christian Hahn, Bettina Fley, and 
Michael Florian

14:25 15:05 Ontological Aspects of the Implementation of Norms in 
Agent-Based Electronic Institutions - Davide Grossi, Huib Aldewereld, Javier 
Vázquez-Salceda, and Frank Dignum

15:05 15.45 Towards a Mapping of Deontic Logic onto an Abductive Framework - 
Marco Alberti, Marco Gavanelli, Evelina Lamma, Paola Mello, Paolo Torroni, 
and Giovanni Sartor

15.45 16:15 coffee-break

16:15 17:00 On the Potential of Norm-Governed Behavior in Different 
Categories of Artificial Societies - Paul Davidsson and Stefan Johansson

17:00 17:45 Concluding discussion

17:45 19:45 AISB: Robot demos, finger buffet

The papers accepted for the symposium will be published in the AISB 
proceedings. Moreover, the best papers will be selected for publication in 
special issues of Computational Intelligence and Computational & 
Mathematical Organization Theory.

All papers are available from our website.

A limited amount of students grants is available from AISB, see the AISB2005 
website for more details.

PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

Guido Boella - Dipartimento di Informatica, Universita' di Torino (co-chair)
Cristiano Castelfranchi - Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies 
(ISTC), Italy
Paul Davidsson - BTH, Sweden
André Meyer - TNO, Netherlands
Maria Fasli - Essex University, UK
Leendert van der Torre - CWI Amsterdam, Netherlands (co-chair)
Harko Verhagen - DSV, KTH/SU, Sweden (co-chair)

SYMPOSIUM WEBSITE: http://normas.di.unito.it/zope/aisb05/

AISB 2005 CONVENTION WEBSITE: http://aisb2005.feis.herts.ac.uk/

Still open for submissions:
2005 AAAI Fall Symposium: Roles, an interdisciplinary perspective: 
http://normas.di.unito.it/zope/roles05 

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