9th International Workshop on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies (DALT 2011)
2 or 3 May 2011
Taipei, Taiwan
(held in conjunction with AAMAS 2011)
URL: http://www.cs.rmit.edu.au/~ssardina/DALT2011
The workshop on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies (DALT), in its ninth edition this year, is a well-established forum for researchers interested in sharing their experiences in combining declarative and formal approaches with engineering and technology aspects of agents and multiagent systems. Building complex agent systems calls for models and technologies that ensure predictability, allow for the verification of properties, and guarantee flexibility.
Developing technologies that can satisfy these requirements still poses an important and difficult challenge. Here, declarative approaches have the potential of offering solutions satisfying the needs for both specifying and developing multiagent systems.
Moreover, they are gaining more and more attention in important application areas such as the semantic web, service-oriented computing, security, and electronic contracting.
DALT 2011 will be held as a satellite workshop of AAMAS 2011, the 10th International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems, in May 2011 in Taipei, Taiwan. Following the success of
eight previous editions, DALT will again aim at providing a discussion forum to both (i) support the transfer of declarative paradigms and techniques to the broader community of agent researchers and practitioners, and (ii) to bring the issue of designing complex agent systems to the attention of researchers working on declarative languages and technologies.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
DALT topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
General themes:
- specification of agents and multiagent systems
- declarative approaches to engineering agent systems
Formal techniques:
- (constraint) logic programming approaches to agent systems
- distributed constraint satisfaction
- modal and epistemic logics for agent modelling
- game theory and mechanism design for multi-agent systems
- semantics of agent communication
- model checking agents and multi-agent systems
Declarative models:
- declarative models of agent beliefs, goals and capabilities
- declarative models of bounded rationality
- declarative approaches for agent-based grid computing
- declarative paradigms for the combination of heterogeneous agents
- declarative approaches to organizations and electronic institutions
- agent-inspired declarative approaches to Web services and service-oriented architectures
Applications of declarative techniques to:
- agents and the semantic web
- multi-agent systems for service-oriented computing
- agent-based grid computing
- agent communication and coordination languages
- protocol specification and conformance checking
- declarative description of contracts and negotiation policies
- security and trust in multiagent systems
Evaluation of declarative approaches:
- experimental analysis of declarative agent technologies
- industrial experiences with declarative agent technologies
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
We welcome and encourage the submission of high-quality, original papers, which are not being submitted simultaneously for publication elsewhere. Papers should be written in English, formatted according to the Springer LNCS style, and not exceed 16 pages. Paper submission is electronic via the conference website.
WORKSHOP PROCEEDINGS
Printed copies of the proceedings will be available at the workshop. Assuming a sufficient number of high-quality submissions, we are again going to consider the publication of formal post-proceedings with an
international publisher. The post-proceedings of DALT 2003 (LNAI 2990), DALT 2004 (LNAI 3476), DALT 2005 (LNAI 3904), DALT 2006 (LNAI 4327), DALT 2007 (LNAI 4897), DALT 2008 (LNAI 5397) and DALT 2009 (LNAI 5948) have been published by Springer-Verlag in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence series.
IMPORTANT DATES
The dates below are tentative; please check the workshop Web page for confirmed dates.
Submission Deadline: 23 January 2011
Notification of Acceptance/Rejection: 25 February 2011
Camera Ready Due: 7 March 2011
Workshop: 2 or 3 May 2011
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE (TBC)
- Thomas Agotnes, Bergen University College, Norway
- Marco Alberti, University of Ferrara, Italy
- Natasha Alechina, University of Nottingham, UK
- Cristina Baroglio, University of Torino, Italy
- Rafael Bordini, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
- Jan Broersen, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
- Federico Chesani, University of Bologna, Italy
- Amit Chopra, University of Trento, Italy
- Francesco M. Donini, University of Tuscia, Italy
- James Harland, RMIT University, Australia
- Andreas Herzig, Paul Sabatier University, France
- Koen Hindriks, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
- Shinichi Honiden, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
- Joao Leite, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
- Yves Lesperance, York University, Canada
- Viviana Mascardi, University of Genova, Italy
- Nicolas Maudet, University of Paris-Dauphine, France
- John-Jules Meyer, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
- Peter Novak, Czech Technical University, Czech Republic
- Fabio Patrizi, University of Rome, Italy,
- Enrico Pontelli, New Mexico State University, USA
- David Pym, University of Aberdeen, UK
- Michael Rovatsos, University of Edinburgh, UK
- Flavio Correa da Silva, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil
- Guillermo Simari, Universidad Nacional del Sur, Argentina
- Tran Cao Son, New Mexico State University, USA
- Eugenia Ternovska, Simon Fraser University, Canada
- Francesca Toni, Imperial College London, UK
- Marina De Vos, University of Bath, UK
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Chiaki Sakama (Wakayama University, Japan)
Sebastian Sardina (RMIT University, Australia)
Wamberto Vasconcelos (University of Aberdeen, UK)
Michael Winikoff (University of Otago, New Zealand)
STEERING COMMITTEE
Matteo Baldoni (University of Torino, Italy)
Andrea Omicini (University of Bologna-Cesena, Italy)
M. Birna van Riemsdijk (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
Tran Cao Son (New Mexico State University, USA)
Paolo Torroni (University of Bologna, Italy)
Pinar Yolum (Bogazici University, Turkey)
Michael Winikoff (University of Otago, New Zealand)