 |  | Multi-agent
systems (MAS) have become an increasingly important area
of research, not least because of the advances in the Internet and
Robotics. However multi-agent systems can become very complicated,
and, consequently, reasoning about the behaviour of such systems can
become extremely difficult. Therefore, it is important to be able to
formalise multi-agent systems and, to do so in such a way that allows
automated reasoning about agents' behaviour. The purpose of this
workshop is to present techniques, based on computational logic (CL),
for multi-agent systems in a formal way.
We solicit unpublished papers that address formal approaches to
multi-agent systems. The approaches as well as being formal must make
a significant contribution to the practice of multi-agent
systems. Relevant techniques include the following:
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Nonmonotonic reasoning in multi-agent systems
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Planning under incomplete information in multi-agent systems
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Usage of abduction in multi-agent systems
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Representation of knowledge and belief in multi-agent systems
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Temporal reasoning for multi-agent systems
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Theory of argumentation for multi-agent negotiation and co-operation
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Communication languages for multi-agent systems
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Distributed constraint satisfaction in multi-agent systems
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Decision theory for multi-agents
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Distributed theorem proving for multi-agent systems
Workshop web page with more
information
http://centria.di.fct.unl.pt/~jleite/clima02/
Program
Committee- Jürgen Dix, U Manchester, UK
- Thomas Eiter,
Vienna U of Techn., Austria
- Klaus Fischer, DFKI Saarbrücken,
Germany
- Michael Fisher, U Liverpool,
UK
- James Harland, RMIT U,
Australia
- Wiebe van der Hoek, Utrecht U,
The Netherlands
- Katsumi Inoue, Kobe U,
Japan
- João Alexandre Leite, New U of
Lisbon, Portugal
- Luís
Moniz Pereira, New U of Lisbon, Portugal
- Ken Satoh, National Inst. of
Informatics, Japan
- V. S. Subrahmanian, U Maryland,
USA
- Francesca Toni, Imperial College, UK
- Paolo Torroni, U Bologna,
Italy
Organizers |
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