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Present CFP : 2013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
************************************************************** CALL FOR PAPERS Fourth International Workshop on * Collaborative Agents -- Research & Development (CARE) 2013 * ** CARE for a Smarter Society ** Full paper submission: September 15th, 2013 http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~xtg/CARE2013/ Dunedin, New Zealand, 3 Dec 2013 ************************************************************** The workshop is held in conjunction with the 26th Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (http://ai2013.otago.ac.nz/), and the 16th Conference on Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent Systems (http://prima2013.otago.ac.nz/) Workshop Summary ================ The topic of this year's workshop is "CARE for a Smarter Society" and associated tracks. The workshop aims to foster discussions on computational models of collaboration that contribute to increasing quality of health and living, promoting citizen participation, and community engagement. The CARE workshop series not only addresses a gap in the existing agent and AI landscape, but also tries to push the boundaries of existing work by addressing a problem that is relatively new to the agent community and that presents the community with exciting applications. We seek contributions of members in research and industry that apply AI and the agent paradigm to approach problems in areas of Smarter Societies. Collaborative care is today's primary means to achieve complex outcomes and to increase the lifetime value of the cared entities. Collaboration enables agents to 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. How can we create computational models, representations, algorithms and protocols to enable the next generation of intelligent collaborative care technologies? How can we build technologies that support collaboration under this complexity and uncertainty? 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. Topics of Interest include (but are not limited to) CARE seeks contributions for the area of a smarter society. Smarter Society - new models and technologies that lead collaborative approaches for problems in Smarter Cities, Smarter Health Care, intelligent campuses, intelligent work places, social networking, education, health informatics, and others. There will be a special track on **Agent-Based Systems for Energy and Environmental Sustainability (ABSEES)**. This track investigates how agent-based technology in conjunction with AI techniques can be used to explore a) the design and development of novel (smart) energy-related systems, b) suitable methodologies, techniques and tools to create sustainable energy systems and c) mechanisms for facilitating sustainable behaviour in several domains (e.g. transportation, urban planning) among a variety of user-roles (i.e. different types of users). The reviews and proceedings of this track will be handled by the ABSEES track chairs. ABSEES Track Chairs: Maryam Purvis, maryam.purvis@otago.ac.nz Takayuki Ito, ito.takayuki@nitech.ac.jp We also consider a demo session, where participants can present practical applications and proof-of-concepts using new models and technologies for collaborative approaches in Smarter Societies, Smarter Health, Smarter Energy, and any other related area. Important Dates =============== Paper submission deadline: September 15, 2013 Notification of acceptance: Oct 1, 2013. Camera-ready copies due: Oct 15, 2013 Workshop Date: Dec 3, 2013 Research Questions ================== - How to collaborative agent technology can help to analyse vast amounts of complex social data? - How to build a model of the features of individuals (citizens/customer/patient behaviour)? - How to construct agent-based models of social behaviour? - How organisational structures influence the negotiation of agents and the distribution/execution of tasks? - How can we support/guide collaborative teams in scenarios like Collaborative Research, Resilient Societies, and Disaster Resilience? - How to apply agents for the next generation of Social Analytics systems in Smarter Societies? - How can we offer flexibility in the way how teams execute plans? - How to enable an effective communication infrastructure for collaborative care (possibly including humans and agents). - How to build a model of the features of individuals (customer/patient behaviour). - How to build comprehensive customer lifecycle management systems for customers, including telecommunication consumers, students and patients. - How can we make team members follow agreed procedures (Incentives? Or more fundamental, by designing a new market?) - 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? - How to build MAS that work efficiently in partially regulated markets (where governance policy or partnership agreements govern part of the market). - How can we make individuals encourage to perform activities to stay on-track and achieve desired outcomes (incentive frameworks)? - How can we enable flexible, goal-driven and contextualised plan creation and business process management (including intelligent execution, monitoring, management, and optimization of business processes)? - How to build an effective monitoring-recognition-intervention framework? - What role does learning and adaptivity play in building organisational MAS? - How to deal with partially regulated markets (free markets are possibly an unrealistic paradigm as they donít really existent)? Submission and Publication ========================== Submission is done electronically at Easychair: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=care20130. Submissions should be formatted according to LNCS specification and submitted as a PDF file. Instructions and templates can be found at: www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. CARE 2013 seeks three types of submissions: - Full paper of 12 pages. - Short paper of 4 pages (such as position and early result papers) are welcome with the option of extending it to a full paper for the post-proceedings. - Demo paper of 4 pages describing a demonstration. This work will then be presented in the demo session of the workshop. Please indicate if your contribution is for the ABSEES track in your submission. Submissions will be peer-reviewed by 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. We plan to publish selected papers as Springer proceedings. (Springer Proceedings with CARE can be found here: http://books.google.com.au/books?isbn=3642224261) Workshop Officials ================== GENERAL CHAIRS Christian Guttmann (IBM Research -- Australia), christian.guttmann@au.ibm.com Fernando Koch (IBM Research -- Brazil), fernando.koch@br.ibm.com PROGRAM COMMITTEE Wei Chen, Intelligent Automation, Inc., United States of America Michael Luck, King's College London, United Kingdom Kobi Gal, Harvard University, United States of America Fredrik Heintz, Linkoping University, Sweden Lawrence Cavedon, NICTA and RMIT University, Australia Michael Thielscher, University of New South Wales, Australia Birna van Riemsdijk, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Cristiano Castelfranchi, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, Italy Leonardo Garrido, TecnolÛgico de Monterrey, Mexico Inon Zuckerman, University of Maryland, USA Neil Yorke-Smith, American University of Beirut, Libanon and SRI International, USA Magnus Boman, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden Zakaria Maamar, Zayed University, UAE Samin Karim, University of Melbourne, Australia Cees Witteveen, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Franziska Kl¸gl, ÷rebro 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 Sascha Ossowski, University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain 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 Martin Purvis, University of Otago, New Zealand Tony Bastin Roy Savarmiuthu, University of Otago, New Zealand Patricia Anthony, Lincoln University, New Zealand Enrico Gerding, University of Southampton, UK Meritxell Vinyals, University of Verona, Italy Shantanu Chakraborty, Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan Gopal Ramchurn, University of Southampton, UK Ryo Kanamori, Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan Previous CARE workshops: CARE@AI 2009, Melbourne, Australia CARE@IAT 2010, Toronto, Canada CARE@AAMAS 2011, Taipei, Taiwan Previous CARE Springer book: http://books.google.com.au/books?isbn=3642224261 Online Discussion Groups ======================== For the purpose of announcements and future collaboration on the workshop topics, professional network groups on Linkedin have been created: CARE and AAMAS. CARE has reached a membership of 50 research professionals, and AAMAS has now almost 1000 professional members (mostly professors, senior researchers and PhD students that have made contribution to the field of agents, or have a keen interest in the subject matter). These two forums are used extensively to discuss AAMAS as well as CARE specific topics. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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