gasser%pollux.usc.edu@oberon.usc.edu (Les Gasser) (10/26/87)
- - - WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT - CALL FOR PARTICIPATION 8th Workshop on Distributed Artificial Intelligence Lake Arrowhead Conference Center Lake Arrowhead, CA. May 22-25, 1988 The 8th Distributed AI Workshop will address the problems of coordinated action and problem-solving among reasonably sophisticated, intelligent computational "agents." The focus will be be synthetic and pragmatic, investigating how we can integrate theoretical and experimental ideas about knowledge, planning, negotiation, action, etc. in multi-agent domains, to build working interacting agents. Participation is by invitation only. To participate, please submit an extended abstract (5-7 double-spaced pages, hard copy only) describing original work in DAI to the workshop organizer at the address below. Preference will be given to work addressing basic research issues in DAI such as those outlined below. A small number of "interested observers" will also be invited. If you are interested in being an observer, please submit a written request to attend (hard copy), with some justification. Participation will be limited to approximately 35 people. A number of submitted papers will be selected for full presentation, critique, and discussion. Other participants will be able to make brief presentations of their work in less formal sessions. There will be ample time allowed for informal discussion. All participants should plan to submit a full paper version in advance, for distribution at the workshop. Suggested topics include (but are not necessarily limited to): Describing, decomposing, and allocating problems among a collection of intelligent agents, including resource allocation, setting up communication, dynamic allocation, etc. Assuring coherent, coordinated interaction among intelligent agents, including allocating control, determining coherence, organization processes, the role of communication in coherence, plan synchronization, etc. Reasoning about other agents, the world, and the state of the coordinated process, including plan recognition, prospective reasoning, knowledge and belief models, representation techniques, domain or situation specific examples, etc. Recognizing and resolving disparities in viewpoints, representations, knowledge, goals, etc. (including dealing with incomplete, inconsistent, and representationally incompatible knowledge) using techniques such as communication, negotiation, conflict resolution, compromise, deal enforcement, specialization, credibility assessment, etc. Problems of language and communication, including interaction languages and protocols, reasoning about communication acts inter-agent dialogue coherence, etc. Epistemological problems such as joint concept formation, mutual knowledge, situation assessment with different frames of reference, etc. Practical architectures for and real experiences with building interacting intelligent agents or distributed AI systems. Appropriate methodologies, evaluation criteria, and techniques for DAI research, including comparability of results, basic assumptions, useful concepts, canonical problems, etc. For this DAI workshop, we specifically discourage the submission of papers on issues such as programming language level concurrency, fine-grained parallelism, concurrent hardware architectures, or low-level "connectionist" approaches. Please direct inquiries to the workshop organizer at the address below. ---------------------------------------------------------------- DATES: Deadline for submission of extended abstracts: February 15, 1988 Notification of acceptance: March 21, 1988 Full papers due (for distribution at the workshop): April 25, 1988 ---------------------------------------------------------------- WORKSHOP ORGANIZER: Les Gasser Distributed AI Group Computer Science Department University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA. 90089-0782 Telephone: (213) 743-7794 Internet: gasser@usc-cse.usc.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------- WORKSHOP PLANNING COMMITTEE: Miro Benda (Boeing AI Center) Phil Cohen (SRI) Lee Erman (Teknowledge) Michael Fehling (Rockwell) Mike Genesereth (Stanford) Mike Georgeff (SRI) Carl Hewitt (MIT) Mike Huhns (MCC) Victor Lesser (UMASS) N.S. Sridharan (FMC Corp) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Support for this workshop and for partial subsidy of participants' expenses has been provided by AAAI; other support is pending. ----------------------------------------------------------------