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- From: ishida@cslab.kecl.ntt.jp (Toru ISHIDA)
- Newsgroups: fj.ai
- Subject: DAI Workshop
- Message-ID: <727@cslab.kecl.ntt.jp>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 02:30:18 GMT
- Sender: news@cslab.kecl.ntt.jp
- Distribution: fj
- Organization: NTT Communication Science Labs., Kyoto, Japan.
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-
- Call for Participation
-
- 12th International Workshop on Distributed Artificial Intelligence
-
- Hidden Valley Resort
- Hidden Valley, Pennsylvania
- May 19-21, 1993
-
-
- Distributed Artificial Intelligence (DAI) is concerned with the study of
- knowledge and action as embodied in multiagent intelligent systems that
- include both humans and computers. More specifically, it is concerned
- with using computational models to understand coordination in both
- cooperative and competitive situations. Coordination is necessary to
- enable efficient resource use, synchronization of agent actions, and
- informed balancing of decision tradeoffs in achieving agents' goals.
-
- The objective of the 12th International Workshop on DAI is to bring
- together researchers and practitioners interested in the broader issues
- of coordinating intelligent agents. Diverse perspectives and approaches
- are of interest including models of coordination, cooperative
- distributed problem solving, integration of heterogeneous systems,
- knowledge representation at social and organizational levels,
- distributed search and constraint satisfaction, cognitive modeling of
- multi-agent interactions, coordination support tools.
-
- Participation at the Workshop will be by invitation only and will be
- limited to approximately 40 people. To participate, please submit a
- technical paper describing original research or significant applications
- in DAI to the Workshop chair. Preference will be given to work that
- addresses one or more of the four DAI themes listed below. We
- specifically discourage the submission of papers in areas such as
- fine-grained parallelism, hardware or language-level concurrency, and
- connectionism, because we feel that work in these areas is more
- appropriate for other workshops. A small number of "interested
- observers" may also be invited to attend. If you would like to be
- considered for attendance on this basis, please submit a written request
- justifying your participation.
-
- To encourage participants to relate their work to ongoing themes in DAI
- beforehand, papers are solicited for (but not strictly limited to) the
- following themes:
-
- 1. Coordination/Collaboration Knowledge: The identification, encoding,
- and use of generic knowledge for coordination and collaboration. This
- theme focuses on general knowledge about resolving conflicts,
- compromising, and cooperating.
-
- 2. Coordination as Search: When viewing coordination as a search
- process, decisions are needed regarding algorithms for conducting the
- search, heuristics for controlling the search, and protocols for
- exchanging and updating portions of the search space. This theme
- broadly includes approaches such as distributed constraint satisfaction
- search, search for compatible distributed plans, search in cooperative
- problem-solving and design, negotiation search, and search for
- appropriate organizational designs.
-
- 3. Intelligent Agents in Enterprises and Applications: Embedding DAI
- systems in computer networks used by people to solve problems allows the
- automation of both cooperative problem-solving activities (such as
- distributed interpretation or diagnosis) and coordination activities
- (such as information filtering or resource allocation). This theme
- includes issues in identifying suitable applications of DAI technology
- and in developing DAI agents that interact effectively with people and
- each other.
-
- 4. Modeling Through Communication and Observation in Adversarial and
- Cooperative Systems: Building and maintaining models of other agents'
- beliefs, abilities, goals, and plans is crucial for intelligent
- interaction. Topics in this theme include acquiring modeling
- information (through communication and plan recognition) and using
- models to make decisions about communication (deciding whether to tell
- the truth, eliciting more information) and about other actions.
-
- 5. Societies and Organizations of Agents: Viewing the society rather
- than the agent as the building block on which to base collaborative
- behavior. Topics in this theme include emergent system behavior, swarm
- intelligence, organizational schemes, issues in organizational design
- and redesign, self-adapting organizations.
-
- These themes are not mutually exclusive, and we welcome papers that
- integrate insights from more than one of them.
-
- As DAI matures, it is appearing more and more in real-world
- applications. This welcome development raises the need for engineering
- principles that will help match particular techniques with kinds of
- problems. We welcome both theoretical and applied papers, and encourage
- each to contribute to the development of these principles.
- Specifically, theoretical papers should explain how their principles and
- methods can be mapped to applications, while applied papers should
- explain why they use the techniques that they do and why other
- approaches are less appropriate for the problem at hand.
-
- LOCATION:
-
- DAI'93 will be held at the Hidden Valley Resort, Hidden Valley,
- Pennsylvania. Hidden Valley Resort is 60 miles from Pittsburgh. The
- participants can arrive by rental car or by shuttle van (price depends
- on number of participants on a particular ride). The resort offers a
- variety of activities including, indoor/outdoor pools, whirlpool, sauna,
- lake fishing and boating, hiking and bike trails, tennis, basketball,
- volleyball and golf. We'll continue the DAI tradition of a
- participatory workshop by active practitioners in a setting that offers
- seclusion, natural beauty, and recreational intermissions.
-
- SUBMISSION DETAILS:
-
- Papers for review should be a maximum length of 15 pages, in a legible
- format (font size 11 or 12 pt). Please submit 4 copies to Katia P.
- Sycara (address below) and indicate on the title page the theme(s) for
- which the paper is most relevant. Also, please include an electronic
- mail address for the appropriate contact person along with the
- submission.
-
- DATES:
-
- Deadline for paper submissions (4 copies, 15 page max): February 1, 1993.
-
- Notification of acceptance: March 20, 1993.
-
- Final papers due (for distribution at the Workshop): April 20, 1992.
-
- We expect that revised versions of the best papers from the Workshop
- will be considered for inclusion in an appropriate journal or in a
- published collection.
-
- PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
- Katia P. Sycara (chair)
- The Robotics Institute
- School of Computer Science
- 5000 Forbes Av.
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Pittsburgh, PA. 15213
- Tel: (412) 268-8825
- FAX: (412) 621-5477
- e-mail: katia@cs.cmu.edu
-
- Susan Conry, Clarkson University, USA
- Edmund Durfee, University of Michigan, USA
- Les Gasser, University of Southern California, USA
- Frank v. Martial, DETECON, Germany
- Van Dyke Parunak, Industrial Technology Institute, USA
- Jeff Rosenschein, Hebrew University, Israel
- Evangelos Simoudis, Lockheed AI Center, USA
- Marty Tenenbaum, Enterprise Integration Technologies, USA
-
-
- ADVISORY COMMITTEE:
- Mark Fox, University of Toronto, Canada
- Jacques Ferber, LAFORIA, France
- Mike Huhns, MCC, USA
- Carl Hewitt, MIT, USA
- Toru Ishida, NTT, Japan
- Victor R. Lesser, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA
- Eric Werner, INRIA, France
-