About the AAMAS Conference
Agents are one of the most prominent and
attractive technologies in computer science at the beginning
of the new milennium. The technologies, methods, and theories
of agents and multiagent systems are currently contributing
to many diverse domains such as information retrieval, user
interfaces, electronic commerce, robotics, computer mediated
collaboration, computer games, education and training, ubiquitous
computing, and social simulation. They not only are a very
promising technology, but are also emerging as a new way of
thinking, a conceptual paradigm for analyzing problems and
for designing systems, for dealing with complexity, distribution,
and interactivity, while providing a new perspective on computing
and intelligence. The AAMAS conferences aim to bring together
the world's researchers active in this important, vibrant,
and rapidly growing field.
The AAMAS conference series was initiated
in 2002 as a merger of three highly respected individual conferences
(ICMAS, AGENTS, and ATAL). The aim of the joint conference
is to provide a single, high-profile, internationally renowned
forum for research in the theory and practice of autonomous
agents and multiagent systems. We expect that the 2003 conference,
in the attractive and cosmopolitan setting of Melbourne, Australia,
will build on the successes and strengths of the 2002 conference,
and will confirm AAMAS as a key event on the international
computing research calendar.
The AAMAS conference is a merger of three
highly successful related events:
- AGENTS (International Conference on Autonomous Agents)
- ICMAS (International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems), and
- ATAL (International Workshop on Agent Theories, Architectures,
and Languages)
The first AAMAS conference (AAMAS-2002, Bologna, Italy)
attracted an astonishing 546 submissions, and is set
to be the largest and most significant event in the academic
history of agent systems to date. We expect AAMAS03 to build
on this success.
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