Symposium on
"Artificial Societies for Ambient Intelligence"
(ASAmI'07)



AISB Convention, 3rd April 2007, Newcastle, UK.

In collaboration with the

Co-Chairs

Dr. Fariba Sadri
fs 'at' doc.ic.ac.uk
Department of Computing
Imperial College, U.K.

Dr. Kostas Stathis
kostas 'at' cs.rhul.ac.uk
Department of Computer Science,
Royal Holloway, U. of London, U.K.

 



Program Committee

Alexander Artikis
(NCSR Demokritos, Greece)

Juan Carlos Augusto
(University of Ulster at Jordanstown, UK)

Cristiano Castelfranchi
(CNR, Italy)

Oscar DeBruijn
(University of Manchester, UK)

Paul J. Feltovitch
(IHMC, USA)

Marie-Pierre Gleizes
(IRIT, France)

Gregory O'Hare
(University College Dublin, Ireland)

Andrea Omicini
(University of Bologna, Italy)

Paolo Petta
(Medical Univ. of Vienna, Austria)

Jeremy Pitt
(Imperial College, UK)

Eric Platon
(NII, Japan)

Harmut Raffler

(Siemens AG, Germany)

Alessandro Ricci
(University of Bologna, Italy)

Nicolas Sabouret
(Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6, France)

Fariba Sadri
(Imperial College, UK)

Rob Saunders
(University of Sydney, Australia)

Daniel Shapiro
(Stanford University, USA)

Maarten Sierhuis
(NASA-Ames, USA)

Kostas Stathis
(Royal Holloway - U. of London, UK)

Francesca Toni
(Imperial College, UK)

George Vouros
(University of Aegean, Greece)

Pinar Yolum
(Bogazici University, Turkey)

Franco Zambonelli
(Univ. of Modena, Italy)

 

Background & Motivation

The vision of Ambient Intelligence (AmI) is a society based on unobtrusive, often invisible interactions amongst people and computer-based services in a global computing environment. Services in AmI will be ubiquitous in that there will be no specific bearer or provider but, instead, they will be associated with a variety of objects and devices in the environment, which will not bear any resemblance to computers. People will interact with these services through intelligent and intuitive interfaces embedded in these objects and devices, which in turn will be sensitive to what people need.

For a large class of the envisaged AmI applications, the added value of these new services is likely to be for people in ordinary social contexts. Such applications beg for technologies that are transparent, so that their functional behaviour can be understood easily. Put simply, transparency should bring AmI interactions closer to the way people think rather than the way machines operate.

Another challenge posed by the AmI vision is that the electronic part of the ambience will often need to act intelligently on behalf of people. The conceptual components of ambience will need to be both reactive and proactive, behaving as if they were agents that act on behalf of people. It would be more natural, in other words, to use the agent metaphor in order to understand components of an intelligent ambience. An agent in this context can be a software (or hardware) entity that can sense and affect the environment, has knowledge of the environment and its own goals, and can proactively plan to achieve its goals or those of its user(s), so that the combined interactions of the electronic and physical environment provide a desirable outcome for one or more people.

If we assume that agents are abstractions for the interaction within an ambient intelligent environment, one aspect that we need to ensure is that their behaviour is regulated and coordinated, so that the system as a whole functions effectively. For this purpose, we need rules that take into consideration the social context in which these interactions take place, and the whole system begs for an organisation similar to that envisaged by artificial agent societies. The society is there not only to regulate behaviour but also to distribute responsibility amongst the member agents.

Goals

We expect that the symposium will help develop scenarios for the use of agent societies for AmI, establish a body of knowledge and a theoretical framework in this context, use the framework to link existing work on related areas such as the semantic web, cognitive and social agents, and ambient and ubiquitous technologies. We also anticipate to present current research in the area of agent societies for AmI, where people activities are mapped onto social organisations of agents, computing devices or both, and assess the outcomes of such research. The symposium will identify issues for future investigation, establish links between researchers and encourage international collaborations.

Topics

Topics of relevance to the symposium include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Social architectures
  • Agent interaction
  • Reasoning and knowledge representation
  • Reactivity and pro-activity
  • Learning
  • Decision making
  • Co-operation and co-ordination
  • Social emergence and evolution
  • Normative reasoning and regulations
  • Security, trust and privacy
  • Interaction design and interfaces
  • Mobility
  • Applications

This workshop complements previous events, such as the European Symposium on Ambient Intelligence, and ongoing events, such as ESAW and AITAmI workshop series.

Download the call for papers in pdf or txt format.

Programme

Obtain the final version of the programme from here.

Important Dates

This one-day Symposium has the following important dates:

Submission Deadline: 8 January 2007
Notification: 5 February 2007
Camera Ready Copy Due: 23 February 2007
Workshop Date: 3rd April 2007

Proceedings

A printed volume of the proceedings will be available at the symposium. Extended symposium papers will be invited for consideration for publication in a special issue of the Computer Journal.

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