April 6-7, 2010, Vienna, Austria (EU)
Chairs: Jörg Müller and Paolo Petta
<URL: http://www.ofai.at/research/agents/conf/at2ai7/>
<Email: at2ai7@ofai.at>
Petta P. (ed.): "From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation 6" — A selection of contributions, IJAOSE, 4(2), 2010. |
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Applied Artificial Intelligence, 24 (in press), 2010. Petta P., Müller J.P. (ed.): Best of "From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation 4", Applied Artificial Intelligence, 20(2-4), 2006. Petta P., Müller J.P. (ed.): Best of "From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation 3", Applied Artificial Intelligence, 16(9-10), 2002. Petta P., Müller J. (ed.): From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation: Best of AT2AI-1, Applied Artificial Intelligence, 14(7), 2000. |
Since its first edition in 1998, the symposium series "From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation" has been not only documenting the progress in agent-related technologies, but also managed to contribute to the rapid development of this area. AT2AI actively promotes the exchange of ideas and experiences between researchers and practitioners working on the whole range of theoretical and application-oriented issues of agent technology. It covers both the micro and macro aspects of agent-oriented design, and discusses the relations of drawing boards and partly idealised models to modelling tools and frameworks to deployment, management and maintenance of implementations. The focus of AT2AI lies in the discussion of direct experience reports from all stakeholders, so as to remain well aware of the actual target domains while using the language of current agent terminology.
Previous AT2AI editions produced a first blueprint of a layered ecology of technologies for the development of agent based applications (cf. the editorial: Engineering Agent Systems: Best of "From Agent Theory to Agent Implementation (AT2AI-3)" in Applied Artificial Intelligence 16(9-10):671-67, 2003 — available as OFAI TR-2002-41 from http://www.ofai.at/tr-online/). This perspective considers middleware, tools, off-the shelf platforms, integrated development environments (IDEs), and the like, with respect to their practical value to improve the application performance delivered. The qualities of these support technologies can in turn be improved and better exploited with the design of architectural frameworks and the deployment of standards. The evolution of these in turn can be assisted by the development of sound theoretical foundations and related formal methods. Methodologies are considered as working know-that and know-how, capturing and maintaining the best practises how to identify, align, and process application- and environment-derived (bottom-up) and support technology related (top-down) requirements and options.
m ---------------------------------------------------+ e | | t theoretical foundations | | h | | o -----------------------------------------+ | | d | | | | o standards | | | | l | | | | o -------------------------------+ | | | | g | | | | | | i middleware | | | | | | e | | | | | | s ---------------+ | | | | | | | | | | | | | IDEs | APPLICATIONS | tools | | | | | | | | | | | | | | +----------------+ | | | | | | off-the-shelf platforms | | | | | +--------------------------------+ | | | | architectures | | | +------------------------------------------+ | | formal methods | +----------------------------------------------------+
AT2AI also compiled an updated inventory against the maturing agent field: the status of logic-based approaches was addressed in particular; but evidence was also provided for how routine consideration of a multitude of perspectives is finally starting to meet the requirements posed by serious application needs (including e.g. issues of privacy and flexible access right management). These results have been published in the triple issue of Applied Artificial Intelligence 20(2-4), 2006.
As with the most recent editions of the symposium, AT2AI-7 is aimed at pushing the envelope further still, as more substantial experiences with more sizeable and persisting systems deployed become available. In addition to the understanding of what approaches and aspects can contribute in which ways to system resilience, sustainability, and other properties of practical importance, further reflection is now starting to identify inherent dynamical properties that are particular to agent-oriented systems and that may enable to expand the range of application support significantly. This for example includes consideration of the pros and cons of functional and physical approaches to encapsulation, and accepting and devising solutions to cope with limited control over the environment and system coherence at the macro level. Also, results from research on "heavier" cognitive agent architectures are being increasingly evaluated and considered for deployment in information agent settings.
Of particular relevance to the workshop are reflections that share insights about experiences and lessons learnt when applying specific agent theories or architectures to application problems, or, from the recipients' end, when contracting agent technologies to provide a service envisioned. Such discussions and critiques may be aimed at conceptual vocabulary, methods, methodologies, good and bad management practices, and other tools and activities: anything that may be of value for system designers to improve the mapping of their agent-oriented toolbox to application needs, and for other stakeholders to better understand the available potential and current challenges of agent-oriented systems.
Submissions are encouraged to cast the presentation in terms of the blueprint schema described above, or to propose principled changes to it. As the previous editions of AT2AI have shown, this is a significant aid for the workshop audience to grasp more readily the significance of the work presented and to relate it to their own activities: the quality and variety of feedback provided to authors improves accordingly, often leading to persisting fruitful contacts.
Paper submission deadline: | November | 30, | 2009 |
Notifications of acceptance/rejection: | January | 2010 | |
Early registration deadline: | February | 4, | 2010 |
Camera-ready copies due: | February | 5, | 2010 |
Symposium date: | April | 6-7, | 2010 |
TUESDAY, 2010-04-06 | |
15:50-16:00 | Welcome |
16:00 | Coordination in Multi-Agent Systems: A Declarative Approach using Coordination Spaces Ante Vilenica, Jan Sudeikat, Winfried Lamersdorf, Wolfgang Renz, Lars Braubach and Alexander Pokahr |
16:30 | Monitoring Time-Aware Social Commitments with Reactive Event Calculus Marco Montali, Federico Chesani, Paola Mello and Paolo Torroni |
17:00 | Behavior Adaptation in RMAS: An Agent Architecture based on MDPs Moser Silva Fagundes, Holger Billhardt and Sascha Ossowski |
Raquel de Miranda Barbosa, Antônio Carlos da Rocha Costa, Patrícia Cabral de Azevedo Resteli Tedesco and Alexandre Cabral Mota | |
18:00 | Discussion |
WEDNESDAY, 2010-04-07 | |
10:50-11:00 | Welcome |
11:00 | Security in Agent-Mediated Negotiation Frameworks Richard Ssekibuule |
11:30 | EnvSupport: A Framework for Developing Virtual Environments Kai Jander, Lars Braubach and Alexander Pokahr |
12:00 | Use and Reuse of Multi-Agent Models and Techniques in a Distributed Systems Development Framework Agostino Poggi and Michele Tomaiuolo |
12:30 | Component-Based Agent Architectures to Build Dedicated Agent Frameworks Victor Noël, Jean-Paul Arcangeli and Marie-Pierre Gleizes |
13:00- | Post-Symposium Lunch |
Paolo | Petta | Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (OFAI), Austria |
Jörg P. | Müller | Clausthal University of Technology, Germany |
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EMCSR 2010 |
Paolo.Petta@ofai.at
Last modified: Fri Mar 25 13:18:30 CET 2010 |