Valencia, Spain
June 4–8, 2012
** ABOUT AAMAS **
AAMAS is the leading scientific conference for research in
autonomous agents and
multiagent systems. The AAMAS conference series was initiated in
2002 by merging
three highly respected meetings: the International Conference on
Multi-Agent
Systems (ICMAS); the International Workshop on Agent Theories,
Architectures, and
Languages (ATAL); and the International Conference on Autonomous
Agents (AA). The
aim of the joint conference is to provide a single, high-profile,
internationally
respected archival forum for scientific research in the theory
and practice of
autonomous agents and multiagent systems.
AAMAS 2012 is the eleventh conference in the AAMAS series,
following enormously
successful previous conferences, and will be held at the
Universitat Politècnica
de València in Valencia, Spain, June 4-8, 2012.
See http://www.ifaamas.org for more information
on the AAMAS conference series.
** WHAT’S NEW? **
We realise that many of you will not read the CFP in detail.
Please at least read
the following points, which highlight significant recent changes.
When submitting papers, if the paper has appeared anywhere
before, even as a
short paper or in a workshop, then you must provide
information on this - see
the Submission Instructions section below for
details.
The “industry track” changed in 2011 to the “innovative
applications” track.
In response to comments at the AAMAS 2011 community discussion
session, AAMAS
2012 also invites “perspective” papers (see the end
of topic list for more
information)
** TOPICS OF INTEREST **
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Agent Communication:
1. Agent commitments
2. Communication languages
3. Communication protocols
4. Speech act theory
Agent Cooperation:
1. Biologically-inspired approaches and methods
2. Collective intelligence
3. Distributed problem solving
4. Human-robot/agent interaction
5. Multi-user/multi-virtual-agent interaction
6. Teamwork, coalition formation, coordination
7. Incentives for Cooperation
8. Implicit Cooperation
Agent Reasoning:
1. Planning (single and multiagent)
2. Reasoning (single and multiagent)
3. Cognitive models
4. Knowledge representation
Agent Societies and Societal issues:
1. Artificial social systems
2. Environments, organisations and institutions
3. Ethical and legal issues
4. Peer to peer coordination
5. Privacy, safety and security
6. Social and organizational structure
7. Trust, reliability and reputation
Agent Theories, Models and Architectures:
1. BDI
2. Belief revision
3. Bounded rationality
4. Formal models of agency
5. Logic-based approaches and methods
6. Mobile agents
7. Modeling other agents and self
8. Modeling the dynamics of MAS
9. Reactive vs. deliberative approaches
10. Service oriented architectures
11. Verification of MAS
Agent-based simulation:
1. Artificial societies
2. Emergent behavior
3. Simulation techniques, tools and environments
4. Social simulation
Agent-based system development:
1. Agent development techniques, tools and
environments
2. Agent programming languages
3. Agent specification or validation languages
4. Design languages for agent systems
5. Development environments
6. Programming languages
7. P2P, web services, grid computing
8. Software engineering (agent- or multi agent-oriented)
Agreement Technologies:
1. Argumentation
2. Collective decision making
3. Judgment aggregation and belief merging
4. Negotiation
5. Norms
Economic paradigms:
1. Electronic markets
2. Economically-motivated agents
3. Game Theory (cooperative and non-cooperative)
4. Social choice theory
5. Voting protocols
6. Artificial economies/markets
7. Auction and mechanism design
8. Bargaining and negotiation
Learning and Adaptation:
1. Computational architectures for learning
2. Reward structures for learning
3. Evolution, adaptation
4. Co-evolution
5. Single agent Learning
6. Multiagent Learning
Systems and Organisation:
1. Autonomic computing
2. Complex systems
3. Self-organisation
Perspectives (see below)
These are papers that analyse in some way the agents research
community, or part
of it. These papers will be handled like any other AAMAS
submission; they will be
evaluated in terms of their originality, soundness, significance,
presentation,
understanding of the state of the art, and overall quality of
their technical
contribution. Papers that merely present a numerical
analysis of trends without
insightful interpretation, or that fail to situate their analysis
within the
existing body of literature, are unlikely to be accepted.
Examples of appropriate topics for perspective papers include
(but are not
necessarily limited to):
An analysis of data concerning trends in a given sub-area of
agents, along with
a discussion of these trends.
An overview of the state of adoption in practice of agents,
along with an
analysis of reasons and future trends
Any other papers that take a “step back” and consider the
research and/or
adoption of some aspect (or all of) the agents
community
** KEY DATES **
For Authors:
Electronic Abstract Submission: October 7, 2011 (11:59 PM
HST)
Full Paper
Submission:
October 12, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)
Rebuttal
Phase:
November 29 – December 1, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)
Author
Notification:
December 21, 2011 (11:59 PM HST)
Conference:
June 4–8, 2012
For Reviewers:
Bidding
deadline:
October 14, 2011 (11:59pm HST)
Paper assignments announced: October 24,
2011
Reviewing
Period:
October 24 – November 21, 2011
Discussion
Period:
December 2–9, 2011
** SUBMISSION **
AAMAS 2012 seeks submissions of high-quality full papers, limited
to 8 pages in
length. Submissions will be rigorously peer reviewed and
evaluated on the basis of
originality, soundness, significance, presentation, understanding
of the state of
the art, and overall quality of their technical
contribution. Reviews will be
double blind; authors must avoid including anything that can be
used to identify
them. Please note that prior submission of an abstract is
required to submit a
full paper. However, the abstracts will not be reviewed and
full (8 page) papers
must be submitted for the review process to start. All work
must be original
(must not have appeared in a conference proceedings, book, or
journal).
To register and submit your paper (in PDF format), please go to
the submission
website: http://aamas2012.confmaster.net and follow
the instructions.
Please keep in mind that you must submit an abstract by October
7, 2011 to be able
to upload your paper (abstract submission is required to submit a
paper, but
abstracts will NOT be reviewed). The abstract and paper
submissions close at 11:59
PM Hawaii Standard Time (HST = GMT - 10:00) on Oct 7 and Oct 12
respectively.
If any substantial part of your work appeared previously, please
provide the
citation and a one sentence description of the differences in the
box provided. It
is OK to submit work that has previously appeared in a workshop
(without an
associated archival publication). For such papers simply fill in
the paper and
workshop info. For papers that build on earlier work that
appeared in an archival
publication, please provide the citation and a one sentence
description of the key
advances/differences. This information will be kept from the
reviewers to ensure a
double-blind review and will only be used by the program chairs.
The page limit for AAMAS 2012 submissions is 8 pages. The
format follows the ACM
proceedings guidelines and consists of balanced double columns, 9
pt text, 1”
(2.54cm) margins top and bottom, and 0.75” (1.9cm) margins left
and right. Each
column is 3.33” (8.45cm) wide with a separation of 0.33”
(0.83cm). A LaTeX style
file and a Microsoft Word template will be available soon on the
conference Web
site (http://aamas2012.webs.upv.es). Please do not
modify the style files, or any
layout parameters.
To ensure the effectiveness of the double-blind review process,
make sure to put
paper numbers (provided upon paper registration) instead of
author names. In
addition, please ensure that any references to your own previous
work is made in a
way that does not disclose author identity (for example, instead
of “in previous
work, we have shown X [ref]” use “X was shown in [ref]”). In some
cases where the
work is clearly a continuation of your earlier work, you may
consider removing
citations to your own work until the final version (for example,
“we have shown X
[ref]” where [ref]= “Anonymous, 200X”). Please also check that
the PDF file
submitted does not contain embedded identifying information.
The mandatory sections of the ACM styles are also mandatory for
AAMAS 2012
submissions. Not only will these sections help select the
reviewers, but according
to ACM: “these index terms effect the ease and accuracy of
retrieval within the
Digital Library which ultimately benefits authors by allowing for
greater
distribution of their work”. Thus, although it may not be trivial
to find the
appropriate classification information, you should make an effort
filling these
sections:
Categories and Subject Descriptors:
Details of the ACM Computing Classification Scheme
are available at
http://www.acm.org/about/class/1998/
General Terms:
This section is limited to the following 16 terms:
Algorithms, Management,
Measurement, Documentation, Performance, Design,
Economics, Reliability,
Experimentation, Security, Human Factors,
Standardization, Languages, Theory,
Legal Aspects, Verification.
Keywords:
This section is your choice of terms you would like
to be indexed by. Please
refer to the Call for Paper page for a list of
keywords.
** SPECIAL TRACKS **
In addition to submissions in the main track, AAMAS-2012 will be
soliciting papers
in three special tracks. The review process for the special
tracks will be
similar to the main track, but with program committee members
specially selected
for that track.
Papers that advance theory and applications of single and
multiple robots are
welcome, specifically those focusing on real robots that interact
with their
environment. Papers should clearly explain how the work addresses
challenges in
robotics, opportunities for novel applications, and fundamental
research issues in
autonomous robotic systems. The goal is to demonstrate the
synergy achieved from
integration of research in agents and robotics.
Keywords for Robotics Track:
1. Cognitive robotics
2. Formal methods
3. Integrated perception, cognition, and action
4. Intelligence for human-robot interaction
5. Machine learning for robotics
6. Mapping (including exploration, coverage, and
SLAM)
7. Networked robot/sensor systems
8. Robot planning (including action and motion
planning)
9. Robot teams, multi-robot systems
10. Robot coordination
11. Robotic agent languages and middleware for robot systems
Virtual agents are embodied agents in interactive virtual or
physical environments
that emulate human-like behavior. We encourage papers on the
design,
implementation, and evaluation of virtual agents as well as
challenging
applications featuring them. The goal is to provide an
opportunity for interaction
and cross-fertilization between the AAMAS community and
researchers working on
virtual agents and to strengthen links between the two
communities.
Keywords for Virtual Agents Track:
1. Modeling cognition and socio-cultural behavior
2. Conversational agents
3. Verbal and non-verbal expression
4. Affect and personality
5. Multimodal agent interaction
6. Computational models of narrative
7. Pedagogical, companion, and coaching agents
8. Culturally-aware agents
9. Virtual character modeling and animation in games,
education, training, and
virtual environments
10. Empirical studies
The Innovative Applications Track is a continuation of the
tradition started by
the Industry Track in past years. Due to the growing maturity of
the field there
are now agent-based applications in widespread use across many
domains,
responsible for the generation of significant revenues, or the
saving of major
costs, or for supporting important public policy and business
strategy
decision-making. This special track provides the ideal forum to
present and
discuss your work: to inform and inspire the largest
international gathering of
agent technology researchers and practitioners with presentations
and
demonstrations of your compelling applications, agent system
deployment
experiences, and new business ideas. The goal is to promote the
fostering of
mutually beneficial relationships between members of the AAMAS
community who are
engaged in foundational scientific research and those who are
working to make
autonomous agents and multi-agent systems a commercial or public
policy
reality. Due to the special review process for the Innovative
Applications track,
papers accepted in this track may be designated in the
proceedings as belonging to
this track.
For submissions to the special track on innovative applications,
authors are
particularly encouraged to address the following questions: What
is the rationale
for using agent-based technology in this application domain, as
opposed to other
approaches? If you have deployed your technology, what insights
have you gained
from the experience? For instance, what lessons do you have
for anyone pitching,
designing, implementing, deploying, using, or evaluating similar
agent systems or
working in similar domains? What improvements or external factors
(such as
technology standards) might facilitate wider-spread adoption of
your technology?
What improvements in fundamental agent technology might improve
your application,
or enable it to be adopted more broadly, or support its better
use?
Keywords for Innovative Applications Track:
1. Telecommunications and media
2. Energy and emissions
3. Bio-technology and health care
4. Financial markets
5. Manufacturing and logistics
6. Transportation and telematics
7. Ambient intelligence
8. Surveillance and security
9. Aerospace and defense
10. Business strategy and marketing
11. e-Government and e-Democracy
12. Public policy and Economics
13. Simulation
14. Implementation lessons
15. Business cases for MAS