Invited Speakers
HUGH DURRANT-WHYTE
Title: Control in Decentralised Sensor Networks (Joint work with Alex
Makarenko, Tomo Furukawa, Ben Grocholsky)
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Abstract: Information gathering tasks such as
exploration, navigation and searching provide a particularly
interesting case of multi-robot control and coordination. Crucially,
such tasks are characterised by having integral pay-off, in which the
set of robots receive a continual measure of value, and by being
decoupled from physical interactions through the environment, as
sensing actions do not generally affect the state of the
environment. These characteristics make solutions to the multiple
sensor information gathering problem far more tractable than the more
general multi-agent control problem. This presenta tion will
describe an information-theoretic approach to problems of control in
decentralised sensing networks. The approach builds on much past work
in decentralised data fusion by using ideas of information gain as
the key metric for controlling and coordinating the actions of
different sensors. Operations such as exploration, navigation and
search can be described in terms of maximising information gain,
employed as both local and global objectives for sensing
agents. Coordination between agents is facilitated because each agent
shares a common sensed model of the environment. Three control regimes
for information gathering are described, only one of which requires
explicit coordination of sensing actions. A greedy algorithm for
information maximisation which requires minimum communication is
demonstrated in problems of tracking and exploration. A key feature of
this method is that it scales well to large numbers of agents
dynamically entering and leaving the global sensing task.
Demonstrations on indoor robot vehicles equipped with laser and vision
sensors is described. Simulation results and planned experimental work
on a fleet of unmanned air vehicles (UAVs) will also be described. In
conclusion we describe the extension of some of these ideas to
terminal pay-off functions where the problem of value assignment to a
group is of significant concern. These include problems of rendezvous
and engagement.
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Brief Biography: Hugh Durrant-Whyte received the
B.Sc. (Eng.) degree (1st class honours) in Nuclear Engineering from
the University of London, U.K., in 1983, the M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees,
both in Systems Engineering, from the University of Pennsylvania,
U.S.A., in 1985 and 1986, respectively. From 1987 to 1995, he was a
Lecturer in Engineering Science at The University of Oxford U, From
1995 to 2002 he was the Professor of Mechatronic Engineering in the
School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering, the
University of Sydney, Australia, where he led the Australian Centre
for Field Robotics (ACFR), a Commonwealth Key Centre of Teaching and
Research. In 2002 he was appointed an ARC Federation Fellow and is now
also the Research Director of the ARC Centre of
Excellence in Autonomous Systems at The University of Sydney. His
research work focuses on autonomous vehicle navigation and
decentralised data fusion methods. His work in applications includes
automation in cargo handling, surface and underground mining, defence,
unmanned flight vehicles and autonomous sub-sea vehicles.
NICHOLAS R. JENNINGS
Title:Negotiation Technologies
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Abstract: Negotiation is a key form of interaction in a wide variety of
areas (including multi-agent systems, the Grid, pervasive computing, and
the Semantic Web). Given this ubiquity, automated negotiation technologies
exist in many different forms, each of which has different
characteristics and properties. Against this background, this talk
discusses work on a variety of models, covering bi-lateral encounters,
auctions and argumentation-based negotiation.
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Brief Biography: Nick Jennings is Professor of Computer Science in the
5*-rated Department of Electronics and Computer Science at Southampton
University where he carries out basic and applied research in
agent-based computing. He is also the Chief Scientific Officer for
Lost Wax. He helped pioneer the use of agent-based techniques for
real-world applications, has been a leading figure in the field of
agent-oriented software engineering and has made foundational
contributions in the areas of automated negotiation and auctions,
cooperative problem solving, and socially rational decision making. He
has published some 180 articles and 6 books on various facets of
agent-based computing and holds 2 patents (3 more pending). He is in
the top 125 most cited computer scientists (out of 660,000) according
to the CiteSeer digital library and has received a number of awards
for his research: the Computers and Thought Award (the premier award
for a young AI scientist) in 1999 (this is the first time in the
Award's 30 year history that it has been given to someone based in
Europe), an IEE Achievement Medal in 2000, and the ACM Autonomous
Agents Research Award in 2003.
W. LEWIS JOHNSON
Title: Social interaction with agents
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Abstract: Social psychologists such as Reeves and
Nass have argued that people tend to relate to media much as they
relate to human beings. Animated synthetic agents have been developed
to exploit this tendency. Such agents raise expectations that they
can function as social actors able to engage in social interactions
with people and other agents. This presentations will describe
efforts at enabling synthetic agents, particularly pedagogical agents,
to interact in a manner that is sensitive to social expectations and
conventions. The social intelligence that this requires is of
practical value in promoting learner motivation and engagement.
Finally I will discuss efforts to enable agents to act in a dramatic
sense to portray roles and convey emotion. This is an essential part
of human social interaction, which often involves the portrayal of
roles. And the application of theatrical principles to agent behavior
results in agent behavior that is more consistent and understandable,
and user experiences that are more engaging.
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Brief Biography: W. Lewis Johnson is director of the Center for
Advanced Research in Technology for Education (CARTE) at the
University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute.
His work involves the application of artificial intelligence to
education, training, and human-computer interaction generally. He is
past chair of the ACM Special Interest Group for Artificial
Intelligence, and past president of the International Artificial
Intelligence in Education Society. He served as co-chair of the First
International Conference on Autonomous Agents, program co-chair of the
First International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and
Multi-Agent Systems, and program co-chair of the International
Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces.
DAVID PARKES
Title: Computational Mechanism Design: Taming the
Strategic Dragon without Invoking the Complexity Monster
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Abstract: Computational systems are increasingly
open, and designed, operated, and used by multiple autonomous and
self-interested parties. Witness the recent explosion in
peer-to-peer, e-commerce, grid-computing, and on-demand
computing. Mechanism design (MD) provides a beautiful mathematical
theory with which to design rules for these multiagent systems and
provide incentives to promote good behavior despite the individual
self-interest of agents. Yet, MD is embarrassingly brittle and
impractical in its rawest form, invoking centralized complexity and
complete revelation of private information to tame the dragon of
game-theoretic complexity. Against this backdrop, this talk discusses
computational issues in the deployment of mechanisms in MAS, covering
the imposition of approximations, the role of agent bounded-
rationality, and dwelling in particular on an agenda in distributed
mechanism design.
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Brief Biography:
David Parkes is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science
at Harvard University where he carries out research
on topics at the interface between computer science and economics, and
in particular in areas of mechanism design, e-commerce, multiagent
systems, and game theory. He received his Ph.D. degree in Computer and
Information Science from the University of Pennsylvania in 2001, and
an M.Eng. (First class) in Engineering and Computing Science from
Oxford University in 1995. A recent recipient of the NSF CAREER Award
for his work in computational mechanism design, Dr. Parkes had earlier
received the IBM Institute of Advanced Commerce award for best
dissertation proposal in electronic commerce. He serves on the
Program Committee of a number of leading conferences in artificial
intelligence, multiagent systems, and electronic commerce, and has
helped to organize a number of smaller symposia. Dr. Parkes is the
author of a number of patents, and serves as a technical advisor to
CombineNet Inc., a start-up company that specializes in advanced
optimization software for electronic markets.
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