International Workshop on Emergent Languages for Multi-Agent Systems
(ELMAS-2006) Call For Papers May 8, 2006 Future University Hakodate, Japan (in conjunction with AAMAS-2006) http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/amag/elmas06/ Recent years have witnessed an explosion of interest in the problem of language emergence and evolution, with most of the scientific light shining on issues in development and change in human language. (See, e.g., http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/amag/langev, the Language Evolution and Computation information repository maintained at the University of Illinois.) This general rise in interest is reflected specifically in the growing number of papers related to this topic at many conferences, including AAMAS. This growth in interest has been accompanied, in MAS, by a growing sense that known approaches to developing, using, and coordinating communication representations, standards, conceptual ontologies, and collective semantics for MAS---currently significant segments of the AAMAS conference---have serious limitations of brittleness, rigidity, and lack of both scalability and openness. The science of emergent language and communication promises to shed new light on these central MAS problems. Equally interesting, techniques and models for emergent language, when addressed in MAS, have many potential applications in other emerging and related fields such as bioinformatics, genetic regulatory networks and cell signaling, description/discovery regimes for web services, information systems interoperability, and more. Such wide "external" relevance of a core MAS issue will broaden the impact of MAS research, and will bring new scientific problems and new researchers into the realm of MAS, helping to grow the field and its importance. As the number of researchers, the rate of publication, and the recognition of relevance has increased, the need for community building and knowledge sharing specifically in the area of emergent languages for artificial, computational agents has also grown. The time is ripe for a workshop on this topic, aiming to assemble researchers who have recently been making important advances on aspects of the problems, to have thorough discussions on their work, to initiate new collaborations, and build new syntheses. The ELMAS-2006 Workshop will bring together researchers working on automated emergence and evolution of language for multi-agent systems (MAS): how open MAS can autonomously create, converge, and continuously adapt the concepts and languages they use for representing and communicating critical information, such as that used in planning, reasoning, coordination, and joint activity. Papers are invited that address issues of emergent language in the context of artificial, computational MAS, in any of the following broad areas: - Precursors for collective language emergence - Collective emergence of concepts, symbols, and ontologies representing both objects and events - Language compositionality and structure - Language convergence and coherence - Utility of emergent language - Interactions between language emergence and planning, learning, and coordination - Language emergence/evolution as a general model and practical foundation for adaptive information systems See the ELMAS-06 Workshop website at http://www.isrl.uiuc.edu/amag/elmas06/ for more suggestions and details on technical topics for the workshop. Submissions The language of the workshop in English and all materials submitted must be written in English. Three types of submssions are encouraged: 1. Full papers (up to 8 pages) presenting mature work. 2. Extended Abstracts (up to two pages) presenting either early-stage or mature work. 3. Short Abstracts (up to one page) describing proposed work or possible applications. All material should be submitted in PDF, formatted according to the ACM style guidelines found here: http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html (Same as AAMAS-06 papers). Please identify which type of submission you are making. Papers should be sent via email to the workshop email address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Papers will be reviewed by Organizers and Program Committee Members. A Proceedings will be published and available at the workshop, and a followup publication such as LNAI or a special journal issue is being pursued. At least one author of any accepted submission must register and attend the workshop. Organizers (Alphabetically): Les Gasser, University of Illinois/Urbana-Champaign, US ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Piotr Gmytrasiewicz, University of Illinois/Chicago, US ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Claudia Goldman, Univ. Haifa, Israel ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Takashi Hashimoto, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Samarth Swarup, University of Illinois/Urbana-Champaign, US ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Important Dates: Deadline for all submissions: January 15, 2006 Notification: February 19, 2006 Submission of final camera-ready version: March 6, 2006 Workshop: May 8, 2006 in Hakodate, Japan _______________________________________________ uai mailing list uai@ENGR.ORST.EDU https://secure.engr.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/uai