9:00 - 9:15 | Welcome (Matt and Mark) |
9:15-10:15 | Keynote talk: Maria Gini |
10:15 - 10:40 | Coffee break |
10:40 - 12:00 | Student presentations (oral): Joris Scharpff, Dynamic Contracting in Infrastructures Jie Jiang, OperA+: a Model for Context-aware Organizational Interactions in Virtual Organizations Loïs Vanhée., Artificial Culture in Artificial Societies Katie Genter. Ad Hoc Teamwork for Leading a Flock |
12:00 - 13:00 | Lunch |
13:00- 14:00 | Career panel: Mark Boddy (Adventium Labs); Catholijn Jonker (Delft University of Technology); Hala Mostafa (BBN Technologies) |
14:00-15:30 | Student presentations (oral): Ofra Amir, Information Sharing for Care Coordination Ramya Pradhan, Influence of inter-agent variation on system redundancy in multiagent systems Yuan Liu, Towards the Design of a Robust Incentive Mechanism for E-Marketplaces with Limited Inventory Stefano Albrecht. Ad Hoc Coordination in Multiagent Systems with Applications to Human-Machine Interaction |
15:30-16:30 | Poster presentations (combined with coffee break) Mohammad Hasan. Emergence of Privacy Conventions in Online Social Networks Hongying Du. The Effects of Human Personality on Human-Agent Interactions Nidhi Parikh. Towards “Live” Synthetic Populations for Large-scale Realistic Multiagent Simulations Elzabeth Jensen. Dispersion and Exploration for Robot Teams Mitchell Colby. Theory and Power Plant Applications of Difference Evaluation Functions Christine Talbot. Creating an Artificially Intelligent Director (AID) for Theatre and Virtual Environments Adam Eck. Active Sensing in Complex Multiagent Environments Landon Kraemer. Reinforcement Learning for Decentralized Planning Under Uncertainty Yang Zhang, Li Zhang and Hossain Alamgir. Multimodal Intelligent Affect Detection with Kinect Pouyan Ziafati. Programming Autonomous Robots Using Agent Programming Languages James Parker. Task allocation for multi-agent systems in dynamic environments Toni Penya-Alba. From Supply Chain Formation to Multi-agent Coordination Cristina Battaglino. Agents with moral dimension Marco Rocco. Computationally efficient techniques for economic mechanisms Branislav Bosansky. Solving Extensive-form Games with Double-oracle Approach Tim Baarslag. Designing an Automated Negotiator: Learning What to Bid and When to Stop Samy Sá. Deliberation About Preferences and Group Decisions |
16:30-17:30 | Discussions in subgroups led by experienced researchers |
17:30-18:00 | Closing |
Accepted Doctoral Consortium submissions
Building upon the success of previous years, AAMAS 2013 will again include a doctoral mentoring consortium, intended for PhD students in advanced stages of their research. This program will provide an opportunity for students to interact closely with established researchers in their fields, to receive feedback on their work and to get advice on managing their careers.
Specifically, the goals of the program are:
In order to participate in the doctoral consortium, students are requested to submit a two page abstract in the AAMAS formatting style describing their research. Abstracts of accepted applications will be published in the official AAMAS proceedings. In addition, students are requested to submit a separate document (maximum two pages) describing the following information:
These documents should be submitted electronically via Easychair:
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aamas2013dc . In this
submission system, please submit your two-page abstract under "Paper"
and the document containing the additional information under "Attachment".
Submissions due: February 11
Acceptance Notification: March 1
Camera ready copies due: March 12
Date of consortium: May 6