---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jennings, Prof NR <nrj@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
Date: Nov 20, 2005 12:38 PM
Subject: [agents] 1st International Workshop on Agent Technology and
Disaster Management
To: agents@cs.umbc.edu
Cc: "Jennings, Prof NR" <nrj@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
Attached is the CfP for this AAMAS-06 workshop.
Nick
-----
Professor Nick Jennings FREng
Electronics & Computer Science t: +44-23-8059-7681
University of Southampton e: nrj@ecs.soton.ac.uk
Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK w:
http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~nrj
==================================================================
CFP: First International Workshop on
Agent Technology for Disaster Management (ATDM)
--- To be held in conjunction with the fifth International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems (AAMAS 2006) URL: http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~sdr/atdm/ ================================================================== Invite ------ This workshop invites works from different strands of the multi-agent systems community that pertain to technologies that can be applied in disaster management scenarios. In so doing, this workshop aims to provide a forum for the discussion of issues arising in designing, implementing, or simulating agent-based disaster management systems. Background ---------- In the light of recent events throughout the world ranging from natural disasters such as the Asian Tsunami and hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, to the man-made disasters such as the London terrorist attacks, the topic of disaster management (also known as emergency response) has become a key concern and there is now an overwhelming need for better information technology to help support their efficient and effective management. Disaster management requires that a number of actors, each with their own aims, objectives, and resources, be able to coordinate their efforts in a number of ways to prevent or manage the aftermath of a disaster. The techniques involved may involve both centralized and decentralized coordination mechanisms that need to operate in environments prone to uncertainty given the dynamic nature of disasters. More specifically, the technical issues that agent-based technologies can deal with include: * Machine learning algorithms that are efficient and effective in dynamic, multi-actor environments that are uncertain and incomplete. * Coordination mechanisms that ensure desirable overall properties emerge based on local actions and views. * Coordination mechanisms that enable collectives to plan and act collaboratively in order to achieve common goals. * Techniques that enable an actor to effectively balance acting and information gathering in dynamic, uncertain, multi-actor environments. * Methods for modelling and predicting the system behaviour that will ensue from specifications of the local behaviour of the individual actors. * Techniques that enable an actor to fuse, in a decentralised manner, inter-related information that is uncertain, incomplete, imprecise and ambiguous. * Decentralised system architectures that can operate effectively in uncertain and dynamic environments and that are robust, scaleable and flexible in their operation. Keywords -------- Papers should target applications of agent-based technology to the area of disaster management. Also, position statements from ongoing projects concerned with the application of information technology to disaster management are also welcome. Relevant topics include but are not limited to: 1. Teamwork, Coordination, and Planning Mechanisms in dynamic and uncertain environments. 2. Decentralised agent-based architectures. 3. Mechanism Design. 4. Multi-agent learning. 5. Decision making under uncertainty. 6. Autonomous robots and robot teams 7. Agent-based simulation 8. Distributed constraints optimisation. 9. Market Mechanisms Submission Instructions ----------------------- Papers should be formatted using the ACM conference style file (http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html) and should be in pdf format. Position statements should not be more than 2 pages and Full papers should not be more than 8 pages. All submissions must be emailed to sdr AT ecs dot soton dot ac dot uk. Important Dates: --------------- January 15, 2006: Deadline for submitting contributions to workshops. February 19, 2006: Acceptance notification to workshop authors. May 9, 2006 Workshop takes place in conjunction with AAMAS 2006. Paper review process -------------------- Papers will be reviewed by 2 PC members each. Organising Committee -------------------- Prof. Nicholas R. Jennings (University of Southampton, UK) Prof. Milind Tambe (University of Southern California, USA) Prof. Toru Ishida (Kyoto University, Japan) Dr. Sarvapali D. Ramchurn (University of Southampton, UK) -- See <http://www.cs.umbc.edu/agentslist> for list info & archives. -- =================================================================== H.Levent Akin [] To acquire knowledge and Department of Computer Engineering [] communicate it to others Bogazici University [] has been the ambition, 34342 Bebek-Istanbul [] pleasure, and business of TURKEY [] my life. [] -William Harvey [] Phone: +90 (212) 359 6769 [] Fax: +90 (212) 287 2461 [] E-Mail:akin@boun.edu.tr [] URL:http://www.cmpe.boun.edu.tr/~akin []
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Received on Sun Nov 20 18:33:12 2005
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