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SIMSOC  January 2011

SIMSOC January 2011

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Subject:

2nd CFP AEGS@AAMAS-2011: the uses of Agents for Education, Games and Simulations

From:

Bruce Edmonds <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Bruce Edmonds <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 25 Jan 2011 14:53:42 +0000

Content-Type:

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Second CfP for the AAMAS-2011 workshop on the uses of Agents for
Education, Games and Simulations
at the Taipei International Convention Center (TICC) in Taipei, Taiwan
on May 2 or 3 2011
In Conjunction with AAMAS 2011
http://www.windmill-cottage.net/AEGS-11/index.html

Rationale and technical description
===================================

Training for complex situations in human societies such as in
education, business transactions, military operations, medical care
and crisis management can be provided effectively using serious games
and simulations. In these types of games and simulations the role of
agents to model and simulate naturally behaving characters becomes
more and more important. Especially in situations where the games are
not just meant to provide fun, but are used to support the learning
process it is important that the games achieve their goal and do not
just distract (or entertain) the trainee.

A major aim of this workshop is to discuss how to model rational (or
non-rational, but natural) behaving agents who are embedded in a
social context with other characters and humans. This is especially
important when both characters and humans can be pro-active but also
have to react to the behaviour of others in their environment.  Thus
these characters should have some social conscience of themselves and
others and base their decisions for actions on this knowledge. Of
course social knowledge may consist of detailed knowledge such as that
some person has been your long time friend and thus can be trusted to
help you, but also general knowledge such as that society looks bad at
people that cheat but adores people that grasp opportunities.  Thus we
aim to model also different levels of action and interactions. Both
the operational ones such as gestures and general way of animating
characters, the tactical decisions such as negotiation tactics when
trying to get some help and long term strategies such as behaving
cooperative towards your boss in order to secure a promotion.  One of
the interesting questions is how these should be modelled and how they
interact? And how do current agent architectures support these models?

In general the technologies used in game engines and multi-agent
platforms are not readily compatible due to some inherent differences
of concerns. Where game engines focus on real-time aspects and thus
propagate efficiency and central control, multi-agent platforms assume
autonomy of the agents. And while the multi agent platforms offer
communication facilities these can or should not be used when the
agents are coupled to a game. So, although increased autonomy and
intelligence may offer benefits for a more compelling game play and
may even be necessary for serious games, it is not clear whether
current multi agent platforms offer the facilities that are needed to
accomplish this.

In this workshop we want to bring people together that address  the
particular challenges of using agent technology for games and
simulations in particular for educational contexts.

The workshop will have four main themes:

1. Technical
What techniques are suitable for agents that are incorporated in
educational contexts, games and simulations. How to balance
intelligence and efficiency? How to couple the agents to the
game/simulation and manage this coupling’s information flow? How to
deal with the inherent real time nature of the game engine
environment? How to couple long and short time interactions?

2. Conceptual
What information is available for the agents' use, either through the
educational context, or from the system, through for example, the game
or simulation engine?  How can reaction to events be balanced with
goal directed behaviour?  How are ontological differences between
information used by agents and information from the domain handled?
How do we choose the actions of an agent?   Too high level gives
little control; too low level makes the agent inefficient.

3. Design
How do we design interactive systems containing intelligent agents?
How do we determine what agents should do and should not do, such that
local autonomy and story line are well balanced. How do we design the
agents themselves that are embedded in other (possibly diverse)
systems (including the behaviour authoring tools and methodologies)?

4. Education
It is also important that we introduce both the design and
construction of these collaborative autonomous systems into the
computer science curriculum and develop ways of encouraging their
effective utilisation across the curriculum.  Contributions to the
workshop will be welcomed that provide a mixture of relevant
theoretical and practical understanding of both the teaching and use
of multi-agent systems in educational and entertainment research,
together with practical examples of the use of such systems in real
application scenarios.  These will be written for students, teachers,
producers, directors and other professionals who want to improve their
understanding of the opportunities offered by the use of multi-agent
systems in teaching and entertainment scenarios of all types.

Important Dates
===============

Deadline for receiving papers                   	January 30 2011
Notification to authors                         	February 27, 2011
Camera ready paper                              	March 7, 2011
Workshop		                         			May 2 or 3, 2011

Submission Procedure
====================

The workshop welcomes submissions of original works relevant to the
topics described above. This year, the workshop will accept
submissions of both full papers (maximum 16 pages, LNCS format) and
short papers (maximum 8 pages, LNCS format).

Short papers are encouraged as a mechanism for the timely reporting of
interesting but preliminary work, that may not as yet have the level
of evaluation or detail that would be expected for a regular paper.
The program chairs may, at their discretion, accept papers that were
submitted as regular papers as short papers, if the authors have
explicitly agreed to this when registering their papers.

All accepted regular papers will receive a slot for oral presentation
in the conference. The accepted short papers will serve as the basis
for discussions during the workshop. If warranted they may be
converted to regular papers for the post-proceedings by incorporating
the results of these discussions.

Submissions will be peer reviewed rigorously and evaluated on the
basis of adherence, originality, soundness, significance,
presentation, understanding of the state of the art, and overall
quality of their technical contribution. More details about the review
process can be found in the conference page.

The papers should be formatted according to LNCS specification and
submitted as PDF files. Instructions and templates can be found at
            http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
Final Papers must be submitted on A4 in PDF format. Your paper should
not include page numbers.

All final manuscripts should be uploaded to easychair no later than

		Sunday 30th January 2011
		========================

The submission web site is http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=AEGS-11
Submissions violating the formatting guidelines will be excluded from
the reviewing process.
At least one author of all accepted papers is expected to attend the Workshop.
All accepted papers will be informally published in the Workshop
proceedings, and the organisers intend to organize a LNCS publication
of the workshop proceedings.

PC Committee
============
# Elisabeth Andre (DFKI, Germany)
# Juan Carlos Augusto (University of Ulster, UK)
# Paul Shueh-Min Chang, (National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan)
# Shu-Heng Chen, (National Cheng-Chi University, Taiwan)
# Bill Clancey (NASA, USA)
# Rosaria Conte (ISTC-CNR, Italy)
# Vincent Corruble (LIP6, France)
# Yves Demazeau (CNRS-LIG, Grenoble)
# Virginia Dignum (Technical University Delft, The Netherlands)
# Alexis Drogoul (LIP6, France)
# Bruce Edmonds (MMU, UK)
# Corinna Elsenbroich (University of Surrey, UK)
# Klaus Fischer (DFKI, Germany)
# Rachel E. Goshorn(Naval Postgraduate School, USA)
# Hiromitsu Hattori (Kyoto University, Japan)
# Annerieke Heuvelink (TNO, The Netherlands)
# Dirk Heylen (Univ of Twente, The Netherlands)
# Koen Hindriks (Delft University, The Netherlands)
# Jane Hsu (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
# Toru Ishida (Kyoto University, Japan)
# Wander Jager (Groningen University, The Netherlands)
# Lewis Johnson (Alelo Inc., USA)
# Gal A. Kaminka (Bar Ilan University, Israel)
# Petros Kefalas (CITY Institute/Sheffield University GR)
# Irving King (Chinese University of Hong Kong, HK)
# Yasuhiko Kitamura (Kwansei Gakuin University)
# Stefan Kopp (University of Bielefeld, Germany)
# Mike van Lent (SOAR technology, USA)
# Michael Lewis (University of Pittsburg, USA)
# MeiYii Lim (Heriot-Watt University, UK)
# Chin-Yew Lin (Microsoft Research Asia, China)
# Shou-De Lin, (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
# Simon Lynch (Univ. of Teeside, UK)
# Eleni Mangina (Phelan, University College Dublin, Ireland)
# Stacy Marsella, (ISI, Univ of Southern California, USA)
# Michael Mateas, (University of California at Santa Cruz, USA)
# Riichiro Mizoguchi (Osaka University, Japan)
# Toni Moreno (Univ. Rovira i Virgili, ES)
# Hector Munoz-Avila (Lehigh university, Bethlehem, USA)
# Emma Norling (MMU, UK)
# Anton Nijholt (UT, The Netherlands)
# Gregory O'Hare (University College Dublin, Ireland)
# Joost van Oijen (VSTEP, The Netherlands)
# Jeff Orkin (MIT, USA)
# Julian Padget (University of Bath, UK)
# Ana Paiva (IST, Portugal)
# Agostino Poggi (Univ degli Studi di Parma, Italy)
# Colin Price (University of Worcester, UK)
# Michal Pechoucek (CTU, Czech rep.)
# David Pynadath  (USC, USA)
# Geber Ramalho (UFPE, Brazil)
# Gopal Ramchurn (University of Southampton, UK)
# Debbie Richards(Macquarie University, Australia)
# Avi Rosenfeld (JCT, Israel)
# Ilias Sakellariou (UOM, GR)
# David Sarne (Bar Ilan University, Israel)
# Maarten Sierhuis (NASA, USA)
# Barry Silverman (UPenn, USA)
# Von-Wun Soo (National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan)
# Pieter Spronck (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
# Demosthenes Stamatis (TEIHE, GR)
# Ioanna Stamatopoulou (South-East European Research Centre, Thessaloniki, GR)
# Katia Sycara (CMU, USA)
# Duane Szafron (U of Alberta, Canada)
# Rainer Unland (University of Duisburg-Essen, GER)
# Harko Verhagen (Stockholm University/Royal Institute of Technology, SWE)
# Joost Westra (UU, The Netherlands)
# Uri Wilensky (Northwestern University, USA)
# R. Michael Young (North Carolina State University, USA)


Organizers
==========

1	Dr Martin Beer
	Communications and Computing Research Centre
	ACES
	Sheffield Hallam University
	Email: [log in to unmask]

2	Cyril Brom
	Department of Software and Computer Science Education
	Faculty of Mathematics and Physics
	Charles University in Prague
	email: [log in to unmask]

3	Von-Wun Soo,
	Department of Computer Science
	Institute of Information Systems and Applications
	National Tsing Hua University
	email:[log in to unmask]

4	Frank Dignum
	Department of Information & Computing Sciences
	Utrecht University
	The Netherlands
	e-mail: [log in to unmask]

-- 

Regards.

---------------------------------------------------
Bruce Edmonds
Centre for Policy Modelling
Manchester Metropolitan University
Aytoun Building, Aytoun Street, Manchester M1 3GH, UK.
Tel. +161 247 6479  Fax. +161 247 6802
http://bruce.edmonds.name

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