
SECOND INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP
on
Collaborative Agents
-- REsearch
and Development (CARE)
2010
held in conjunction with the International Conference on
Intelligent Agent Technology (IAT).
Workshop Day on 31st
August 2010 (York University, Toronto, Canada)
Contact
CARE organisers
Christian Guttmann, Email: christian.guttmann@gmail.com
Frank Dignum, Email: dignum@cs.uu.nl
CARE 2010 PROGRAM
Location: TEL 0005
8.35 – 8.45
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Welcome
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8.45 – 9.10
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Multi-Agent
Coalition Formation for Distributed Area Coverage: Analysis and Evaluation
Ke Cheng
and Prithviraj Dasgupta
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9.10 – 9.35
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Collaboration in Network-Centric
Warfare - Modeling Joint Fire Support Teams
Christian Gerstner, Robert
Siegfried, and Nane Kratzke
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09.35 – 10.00
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Isogonic
Formation with Connectivity Preservation for a Team of Holo. Robots in a Cluttered Environment
Soheil
Keshmiri and Shahram Payandeh
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10.00 – 10.20
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Tea Break
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10.20 – 10.45
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E-Learning
Computational Cloud (eLC2): Web Services Platform to Enhance Task
Collaboration
Sidhant
Rajam, Ruth Cortez, Alexander Vazhenin, and Subhash Bhalla
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10.45 – 11.10
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Modeling Warehouse Logistics
using Agent Organizations
Marcel Hiel, Huib Aldewereld,
and Frank Digum
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11.10– 11.35
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Enhancing
Patient-Centered Palliative Care With Collaborative Agents
Ji Ruan,
Wendy MacCaull, and Heather Jewers
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11.35– 12.00
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Intelligent Adherence Support to
Manage Contractual Relationships
Christian Guttmann, Kumari
Wickramasinghe, Ian Edward Thomas, Michael Georgeff, and Heinz Schmidt
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12.00 – 13.35
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Lunch Break
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13.35 – 15.00
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Workshop Keynote Address
Professor
Milind Tambe, University of Southern California*
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Discussion,
Panel and Future of CARE – Closing
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Online
Discussion Groups
Please join the CARE and AAMAS
Linkedin groups for updates and discussions about CARE and Agents.
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Invited Speaker: Professor Milind Tambe,
University of Southern California*
Title: Two Decades of Multiagent Teamwork Research:
Past, Present, Future
(Session C
13:25 – 15:00, Location TEL 0005)
Abstract:
Belief-desire-intention (BDI) theories of Multiagent Teamwork guided the
first breakthrough in multiagent collaboration, leading to domain
independent models of multiagent teamwork that were resuable across
domains and more robust to failures. While these models provided early
successes in terms of large-scale applications, their perceived weaknesses
in: (i) handling costs and uncertainties of real-world domains, and (ii)
scaling up to problems requiring large networks of less powerful
computing nodes, have led to two new models that have dominated
multiagent teamwork research this past decade: Distributed Partially
Observable Markov Decision Problems (DEC-POMDPs) and Distributed
Constraint Optimization (DCOPS).
After a quick review of past research and outlining a framework to
view recent advances in DCOP and DEC-POMDP, I will discuss our recent research
results in DCOPs and DEC-POMDPs. I
will focus in particular on our recent work on scalable but incomplete
(locally optimal) DCOP algorithms, as well as DCOP algorithms when
rewards are unknown. For example, given unknown rewards, increased team coordination
in DCOP algorithms can hurt team performance, even when communication and
computation costs are ignored, which we term the team uncertainty
penalty. I will end my
presentation with a look at the future of this area of research: After a
decade of encouraging progress with these new models, it is time to step
back and ask if there is something we could still learn from BDI teamwork
models, and how that might help us in pushing forward successes in terms
of large-scale applications.
Biography:
Milind Tambe is a Professor of Computer Science and Industrial and
Systems Engineering at the University of Southern California (USC). He
received his Ph.D. from the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon
University. He leads the TEAMCORE Research Group at USC, with a research
focus on agent-based and multi-agent systems. He is a fellow of AAAI
(Association for Advancement of Artificial Intelligence) and recipient of
the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) SIGART Agents Research
award. He is also the recipient of a special commendation given by the
Los Angeles World Airports police from the city of Los Angeles, USC
Viterbi School of Engineering use-inspired research award, Okawa
foundation faculty research award, the RoboCup scientific challenge award,
and the ACM recognition of service award. Prof. Tambe and his research
group's papers have been selected as best papers or finalists for best
papers at a dozen premier Artificial Intelligence and Operations Research
Conferences and workshops, and their algorithms have been deployed for
real-world use by several agencies including the LAX police, the Federal
Air Marshals service and the Transportation security administration.
* This is joint research
with members of Tambe’s Teamcore research group, including Jun Kwak, Matt
Taylor, Manish Jain, Chris Kiekintveld, Zhengyu Yin, Rong Yang and
others.
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Workshop Summary
Collaboration is required when multiple agents achieve complex goals that
are difficult or impossible to attain for an individual agent. This
collaboration takes place under conditions of incomplete information,
uncertainty, and bounded rationality, much of which has been previously
studied in economics and artificial intelligence. However, many real world
domains are characterised by even greater complexity, including the
possibility of unreliable and non-complying collaborators, complex market and
incentive frameworks, and complex transaction costs and organisational structures.
This workshop's thematic focus is on collaborative and autonomous agents that
plan, negotiate, coordinate, and act under this complexity.
This workshop aims to foster discussions
on computational models of collaboration in distributed systems,
addressing a range of theoretical and practical issues. We seek contributions
of members in research and industry that use the agent paradigm to approach
their problems.
Some issues of interest of this workshop are:
- How to enable agents to form and follow joint agreements and
contracts in complex organisational and market driven
domains.
- How to develop a comprehensive contractual
formation/maintenance framework applicable to many
application domains.
- How to build comprehensive customer lifecycle management systems for
customers, including telecommunication consumers, students and patients.
- How to deploy lifecycle management systems in real world applications,
such as healthcare, telecommunication, and smart campuses.
- How to design markets that are adequate for
agents to act with incomplete
and uncertain information of the behaviour of collaborating agents.
- How to build MAS that work efficiently in partially regulated markets
(where governance policy or partnership agreements govern part of the
market).
- What are the implications of partial regulation on
the management of contractual relationships and service delivery.
- How organisational structures influence the negotiation of agents and the
distribution/execution of tasks.
- How to cope with collaborators that exhibit unreliable
and non-conformant behaviour, eg where agreements are
made but are not always conformed with.
- How can interventions and incentive structures
assist in managing contractual relationships and service delivery.
- How to assign transaction costs to
actions in planning, assignment, and execution in organisational
structures.
- How can transaction costs influence the social outcome of the
system which is further influenced by the organisational context under
which the collaboration takes place.
- Can lessons learnt in game theoretic computation
inform collaborative agent
settings.
- What role
does learning and adaptivity
play in building organisational MAS.
The one day workshop will feature a mixture of invited talks,
discussions and submitted contributions describing current work or work in
progress in collaborative agent research and technology. The workshop
environment fosters open discussions among all participants, particularly
encouraging students to discuss their research topics and seek feedback from
senior agent researchers.
Accommodation
Info in Toronto.
Important Dates
FINAL EXTENDED
Full Paper DEADLINE: April 26, 2010
Abstract submission: April 14, 2010
Full paper submission: April 16, 2010
Notification: June 7, 2010
Camera ready: June 21, 2010
Workshop Poster
in PDF format
Call
for Papers (CFP) in TXT format
Topics of Interest include
(but are not limited to):
RESEARCH
- Collaboration frameworks
- Models of teamwork and joint action
- Organisation/Institutes/Norms
- Auctioning/Negotiation
- Task/Resource allocation
- Behaviour modelling/monitoring
- Adherence/Intervention mechanisms
- Incentive frameworks
- Intervention mechanisms
- Agreement technology
- Contract
networks/formation
- Cloud
computing
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APPLICATION
AREAS
- Collaborative care planning/management
- Disaster planning/management
- Traffic planning/management
- Transport/Logistics
- Applications in primary and preventative
healthcare
- Chronic disease planning/management
- Epidemiological agent models
- Unmanned air/land vehicles
- Robotic soccer/Robotic rescues
- Weather forecast
- Artificial and natural immune systems
- Social networks (e.g., LinkedIn,
Facebook,...)
- Smart grid network (e.g., electricity/gas
metering)
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Submission and Publication
Submission is to be done electronically at Cyberchair at: http://wi-consortium.org/cyberchair/wiiat10/scripts/ws_submit.php.
CARE 2010 seeks 4-page submissions formatted according to IEEE specification.
Style Files for Paper
Submission
IEEE Computer Society Proceedings Manuscript Formatting Guidelines:
DOC: ftp://pubftp.computer.org/press/outgoing/proceedings/instruct8.5x11.doc
PDF:ftp://pubftp.computer.org/press/outgoing/proceedings/instruct8.5x11.pdf
PS: ftp://pubftp.computer.org/press/outgoing/proceedings/instruct.ps
LaTex Formatting Macros:
ftp://pubftp.computer.org/Press/Outgoing/proceedings/IEEE_CS_Latex8.5x11x2.zip
Submissions will be peer-reviewed by two or three reviewers per paper.
Selection criteria will include relevance, significance, impact, originality,
technical soundness, quality of presentation. Some preference may also be
given to papers which address emergent trends or important common themes, or
which enhance balance of workshop topics.
Workshop Officials
GENERAL CHAIR
Christian
Guttmann (Etisalat British Telecom Innovation Centre EBTIC,
United Arab Emirates and Monash University, Australia)
Frank
Dignum (University Utrecht, Netherlands)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Wei Chen (Intelligent Automation, Inc., United States of America)
Philippe Pasquier (Simon Fraser University,
Canada)
Michael
Luck (King's College London, United Kingdom)
Lawrence Cavedon (NICTA and RMIT University,
Australia)
Samin Karim (Accenture,
Australia)
Cees Witteveen (Delft
University of Technology, Netherlands)
Franziska Klügl (Örebro University, Sweden)
Toby Walsh (NICTA and UNSW, Australia)
Cristiano Castelfranchi (Institute of
Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, Italy)
Alexander Pokahr (University Hamburg,
Germany)
Lars Brauchbach (University Hamburg,
Germany)
Wayne Wobcke (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Rainer Unland (University of
Duisburg-Essen, Germany)
Liz Sonenberg (Melbourne University,
Australia)
Kumari Wickramasinghe (Monash
University, Australia)
Simon Thompson (British
Telecom Research Laboratories, United Kingdom)
Gord McCalla (University of
Saskatchewan, Canada)
Andrew Gilpin (Hg Analytics,
United States of America)
David Morley (SRI International,
United States of America)
Marcelo Blois Ribeiro (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio
Grande do Sul, Brazil)
Simon Goss (Defence Science and Technology Organisation DSTO, Australia)
Previous CARE
workshops:
CARE09@AI09,
Melbourne, Australia
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