Call for Papers
Introduction
AAMAS is the premier scientific conference for research in autonomous agents and multi-agent systems. The AAMAS conference series was initiated in 2002 as a merger of three highly respected individual conferences: the International Conference on Autonomous Agents (AGENTS), the International Workshop on Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages (ATAL), and the International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems (ICMAS). 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 multi-agent systems. (See The AAMAS conference for more information.) AAMAS-06 is the fifth conference in the AAMAS series, following enormously successful previous conferences at Bologna, Italy (2002), Melbourne, Australia (2003), New York City, USA (2004), and Utrecht, the Netherlands (2005). AAMAS-06 will be held at the Future University-Hakodate, Japan. Hakodate is a beautiful city located at the southern end of Japan's northern island, Hokkaido.
Information for Authors
AAMAS-06 encourages the submission of theoretical, experimental, methodological, and applications papers. Theory papers should make clear the significance and relevance of their results to the AAMAS community. Similarly, applied papers should make clear both their scientific and technical contributions, and are expected to demonstrate a thorough evaluation of their strengths and weaknesses in practice. Papers that address isolated agent capabilities (for example, planning or learning) are discouraged unless they are placed in the overall context of autonomous agent architectures or multiagent system organization and performance. A thorough evaluation is considered an essential component of any submission. Authors are also requested to make clear the implications of any theoretical and empirical results, as well as how their work relates to the state of the art in autonomous agents and multiagent systems research as evidenced in, for example, previous AAMAS conferences. All submissions will be rigorously peer reviewed and evaluated on the basis of the quality of their technical contribution, originality, soundness, significance, presentation, understanding of the state of the art, and overall quality.
In addition to conventional conference papers, AAMAS-06 will also include a demonstrations track for work focusing on implemented systems, software, or robot prototypes; and an industry track for descriptions of industrial applications of agents. The submission processes for the demonstration and industry tracks will be separate from the main paper submission process.
Topics of Interest
Topics of interest to AAMAS-06 include, but are not restricted to:
- agent and multi-agent architectures
- agent communication: languages, semantics, pragmatics, protocols
- agent programming languages
- agent standardizations in industry and commerce
- agents and adjustable autonomy
- agents and ambient intelligence
- agents and cognitive models
- agents and novel computing paradigms (e.g. autonomic, grid, P2P, ubiquitous computing)
- agents, web services and semantic web
- agent-based simulation and modeling
- agent-mediated electronic commerce and trading agents
- agent-oriented software engineering and agent-oriented methodologies
- applications of autonomous agents and multi-agent systems
- argumentation in agent systems
- artificial social systems
- auctions and electronic markets
- autonomous robots and robot teams
- coalition formation and teamwork
- collective and emergent agent behavior
- computational complexity in agent systems
- constraint processing in agent systems
- conventions, commitments, norms, social laws
- conversation and dialog in agent systems
- cooperative distributed problem solving in agent systems
- cooperation and coordination among agents
- electronic institutions
- formal models of agency
- frameworks, infrastructures and environments for agent systems
- game theoretic foundations of agent systems
- humanoid and sociable robots
- information agents, brokering and matchmaking
- legal issues raised by autonomous agents
- logics for agent systems
- mobile agents
- (multi-)agent evolution, adaptation and learning
- (multi-)agent planning
- negotiation and conflict handling in agent systems
- ontologies and agent systems
- perception, action and planning in agents
- performance evaluation of agent systems
- privacy, safety and security in agent systems
- scalability, robustness and dependability of agent systems
- social choice mechanisms
- social and organizational structures of agent systems
- specification languages for agent systems
- synthetic, embodied, emotional and believable agents
- task and resource allocation in agent systems
- computational autonomy
- trust and reputation in agent systems
- verification and validation of agent systems
- other
Important Dates
Please note that AAMAS 2006 has earlier submission deadlines than the previous AAMAS conferences:
- Oct 15, 2005:
- electronic abstract submission deadline
- Oct 18, 2005:
- electronic paper submission deadline
- Dec 20, 2005:
- notification