[UAI] Workshop on Game Theoretic and Decision Theoretic Agents

From: Simon Parsons (S.D.Parsons@csc.liv.ac.uk)
Date: Mon Feb 18 2002 - 14:10:48 PST

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      WORKSHOP ON GAME THEORETIC AND DECISION THEORETIC AGENTS

                             GTDT'02

       Held in association with the 2002 National Conference on
                 Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-2002),
                         July 28 - August 1, 2002
                               in
                     Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    This workshop is a continuation of the tradition of prior
    sucessful GTDT symposia and workshops in 1999, 2000 and 2001.

    Over the last few years game and decision theories have proved to
    be powerful tools with which to design autonomous agents, and to
    understand interactions in systems composed of many such agents.
    Decision theory has been adopted as a paradigm for designing agents
    that can handle the uncertainty of any moderately complex environment,
    and act rationally to achieve their goals. Game theory, building on
    the assumption that agents are rational and self-interested, has been
    employed in the design of mechanisms and protocols for interaction,
    coordination, communication, negotiation, coalition formation, fair
    voting techniques, market-based resource management systems, and
    industrial-scale information economies. Further, interesting recent
    results have been reported on the issue of mechanism and protocol
    design for bounded rational agents.

    As a result, there is be much to be gained from bringing together
    researchers interested in game theory and decision theory to present
    recent work on the applications of these techniques in the
    construction of agents and agent systems, and to discuss the
    cross-over between these fields.

    As with previous GTDT workshops, we plan to publish a selection of the
    accepted papers as a journal special issue and/or in book form.

    Web page:
    - ---------

    http://www.uic.edu/~piotr/aaai02-gtdt.html

    Submission information:
    - ----------------------

    Submissions are due on March 15, 2002.

    Please submit the paper electronically (at most 15 pages standard
    LaTeX article style) electronically in postscript (preferred) on pdf,
    to

    Piotr Gmytrasiewicz
    piotr@cs.uic.edu

    Authors will be notified about the acceptance of their papers on April 15

    Topics of Interest:
    - -------------------

    We solicit papers dealing with, but not limited to, the following
    areas:

    * Developments in decision theory or game theory
      applicable to agent-based systems;
    * Descriptions of agent systems employing game theory or decision
      theory;
    * Empirical evaluations of agent systems employing game
      theory or decision theory; and
    * Position statements about the use of game theory or decision
      theory in agent systems.

    Descriptions of deployed systems are welcome. We are also interested
    in the use of non-standard variants of decision theory (including
    qualitative and logical approaches), and in approaches that combine
    decision and game theories.

    Organizers:
    - -----------

    Co-chair: Piotr Gmytrasiewicz,
    CSE Department
    University of Texas at Arlington
    Arlington, TX 76019-0015
    Email: piotr@cse.uta.edu

    Co-Chair: Simon Parsons,
    Center for Coordination Science
    Sloan School of Management
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Email: sparsons@mit.edu

    Program Committee:
    ------------------

    Cristina Biccheri (Carnegie Mellon University)
    Craig Boutilier (University of Toronto)
    Jon Doyle (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
    Amy Greenwald (Brown University)
    Jeff Kephart (IBM Institute for Advanced Research)
    Sarit Kraus (Bar-Ilan University)
    Martha Pollack (University of Michigan)
    Richard E. Stearns (University of Albany)
    Wynn Stirling (Brigham Young University)
    Gerald Tesauro (IBM Watson Research Center)
    Leon van der Torre (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
    Russell Vane (Litton PRC)
    Michael Wooldridge (University of Liverpool)
    Shlomo Zilberstein (University of Massachusetts)



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