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                            | No. | Workshop | Title | 
                              Duration | Date |  
                            | W1 |  | Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations | 1 Day | May  3 |  
                            | Takayuki Ito |  
                            | W2 |  | Agent Design: Adapting from Practice to Theory (CANCELED) | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Nathan Schurr |  
                            | W3 |  | Agent and Data    Mining Interaction Workshop | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Andreas L. Symeonidis |  
                            | W4 |  | Agents for Educational Games and Simulations | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Martin Beer, Von-Wun Soo, Cyril Brom, Frank Dignum |  
                            | W5 |  | Adaptive and Learning Agents | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Peter Vrancx, Matt Knudson, Marek Grzes |  
                            | W6 |  | Agent-Mediated Electronic Commerce | 1/2 Day | May 2 (AM) |  
                            | Onn Shehory |  
                            | W7 |  | Agent-based    Modeling for PoLicy Engineering | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Francien Dechesne |  
                            | W8 |  | Agent-Oriented Software Engineering | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Danny Weyns |  
                            | W9 |  | Argumentation in Multi-Agent Systems | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Peter McBurney |  
                            | W10 |  | Autonomous Robots and Multirobot Systems | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Gal Kaminka, Adriaan ter Mors |  
                            | W11 |  | Agent    Technologies for Energy Systems | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Alex    Rogers |  
                            | W12 |  | Collaborative    Agents – Research & Development | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Christian Guttmann |  
                            | W13 |  | Coordination, Organizations, Institutions and Norms in Agent Systems | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Stephen Cranefield |  
                            | W14 |  | Cooperative Games in Multiagent Systems | 1/2 Day | May 3 (AM) |  
                            | Yoram Bachrach |  
                            | W15 |  | Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies | 2/3 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Wamberto Vasconcelos |  
                            | W16 |  | Data Oriented Constructive Mining and Multi-Agent Simulation, Massively Multi-Agent    Systems: Models, Methods and Tools | 1/2 Day | May 2 (PM)
 |  
                            | Hiromitsu Hattori, Nadeem Jamali |  
                            | W17 |  | Infrastructures    and Tools for Multiagent Systems | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Jose Miguel Such |  
                            | W18 |  | Multi-Agent-Based Simulation | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Jordi Sabater, Daniel Villatoro, Jaime Sichman |  
                            | W19 |  | Multiagent Sequential Decision Making in Uncertain Domains | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Stefan    Witwicki |  
                            | W20 |  | Optimisation in    Multi-Agent Systems | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Sarvapali Ramchurn |  
                            | W21 |  | Programming    Multi-Agent Systems | 1 Day | May 3 |  
                            | Rafael Bordini, Louise Dennis, Olivier  Boissier |  
                            | W22 |  | Trust in Agent    Societies | 1 Day | May 2 |  
                            | Rino Falcone |  Workshop Descriptions ACANComplex Automated Negotiations have been widely  studied and are becoming an important, emerging area in the field of Autonomous  Agents and Multi-Agent Systems. The goal of this workshop is to bring together  researchers from these communities to learn about each other's approaches, form  long-term collaborations, and cross-fertilize the different areas to accelerate  progress towards scaling up to larger and more realistic applications. From  2010, ACAN is tightly cooperating with ANAC (Automated Negotiating Agents Competition).  Based on the great success of ANAC2010, the ANAC2011 will be held at AAMAS2011  at Taiwan. This year, we, ACAN, have the ANAC special session, in which the  finalists of ANAC will describe their negotiating agents.
 
  ADAPTIn ADAPT, we hope to bridge the gap between theory and practice.   We hope to do this by fostering an exchange where the lessons learned from  taking theory to practice and are used to understand the limitations of the  theoretical models and the lessons learned directly from practice and used to  discover the issues that theoretical models need to address. Over the last several  years, members of the agents community have been involved with real-world  systems in robotics, decision-support agents, personal-assistant agents in  military, space and commercial domains. Many of the lessons learned from these  endeavors involve the surprises, difficulties and flaws. These lessons are  often not shared because they bring about questions for which an answer is not  apparent. Nevertheless, it is important for our community to know and discuss  these challenges if we are to produce the ideas and technology that are  transformative and ultimately, utilized by practitioners.
  ADMIThe ADMI  workshop provides a premier forum for sharing research and engineering results,  as well as potential challenges and prospects encountered in the respective  communities and the coupling between agents and data mining. The workshop  welcomes theoretical work and applied dissemination aiming to: (1) exploit  agent-enriched data mining and demonstrate how intelligent agent technology can  contribute to critical data mining problems in theory and practice; (2) improve  data mining-driven agents and show how data mining can strengthen agent  intelligence in research and practical applications; (3) explore the  integration of agents and data mining towards a super-intelligent system; (4)  discuss existing results, new problems, challenges and impact of integration of  agent and data mining technologies as applied to highly distributed  heterogeneous, including mobile, systems operating in ubiquitous and P2P  environments; and (5) identify challenges and directions for future research  and development on the synergy between agents and data mining.
 
  
 AEGSTraining for  complex situations in human societies such as in education, business  transactions, military operations, medical care and crisis management can be  provided effectively using serious games and simulations. In these types of  games and simulations the role of agents to model and simulate naturally  behaving characters becomes more and more important. A major aim of this  workshop is to discuss how to model rational (or non-rational, but natural)  behaving agents who are embedded in a social context with other characters and  humans. An important issue is that the technologies used in game engines and  multi-agent platforms are not readily compatible due to some inherent  differences of concerns. Where game engines focus on real-time aspects and thus  propagate efficiency and central control, multi-agent platforms assume autonomy  of the agents. And while the multi agent platforms offer communication  facilities these can or should not be used when the agents are coupled to a  game. Approaches to solve this issue are especially relevant for this workshop.
 
  
 ALAThe Adaptive and  Learning Agents workshop serves as an inclusive forum for the discussion of  ongoing or completed work in both theoretical and practical issues of adaptive  and learning agents and multiagent systems.The workshop concerns all aspects  these agent systems, with a particular emphasis on how to modify established  learning techniques and/or create new learning paradigms to address the many  challenges presented by complex real-world problems.
 
  
 AMECThe design and analysis of electronic commerce systems in which agents are deployed involves finding solutions to a large and diverse array of problems, concerning individual agent behaviors, interaction, and collective behavior. A wide variety of electronic commerce scenarios and systems, and agent approaches to these, have been studied in recent years. These studies suggest models that support the design and the analysis at both the level of the single agent and the level of the multi-agent system.
 This workshop will address both the agent level and the system level, combining design and analysis aspects of electronic commerce. The primary goal of this workshop is to continue to bring together novel work from diverse fields as Computer Science, Game Theory, Economics, Artificial Intelligence and Distributed Systems that focus on modeling, implementation and evaluation of computational trading agents and institutions.
  AMPLESocio-technical systems are complex adaptive entities  that require the engagement of social and technical elements in an environment  to reach certain goals. One of the major tools for understanding  socio-technical systems is agent-based modeling. AMPLE aims at bringing  together the topics of  agent and  artificial society research on the one hand, with policy making, institutional  analysis and the tools being used on the other, in order to discuss mutual  effect of models on societies and vice versa.
 
  
 AOSE Since  the early 1990s, multi-agent system researchers have developed a large body of  knowledge on the foundations and engineering principles for designing and  developing agent-based systems. The 11 past editions of the agent-oriented  software engineering workshop (AOSE) had a key role in this endeavor. For 2011,  the workshop organizers and the steering committee plan to organize a special  edition of AOSE. In particular, we aim to wrap up the previous editions of the  workshop with a discussion of the the state of the art in the key areas of AOSE  and based on that outline the future of the field. This way, we aim to find a  way out of the increasing fragmentation and fuzziness on software engineering  in AOSE.
  ArgMASArgMAS 2011 will  focus on the concepts, theories, methodologies, and applications of  computational models of argumentation in building autonomous agents and  multi-agent systems.  Argumentation can  be defined as the formal interaction of different arguments for and against  some conclusion (eg, a proposition, an action intention, a preference, etc). An  agent may use argumentation techniques to perform individual reasoning, in  order to resolve conflicting evidence, or to decide between conflicting goals. Multiple  agents may also use dialectical argumentation in order to identify and  reconcile differences between themselves, through interactions such as
 negotiation,  persuasion, and joint deliberation.
 
  
 ARMSThe Autonomous Robots and Multi-Robot workshop aims to bring together researchers in agent technology and robotics. Many canonical robotics problems, such as robotic soccer, coverage, foraging, and patrolling, can also serve as the basis for research into multi-agent technology. Similarly, problems that have traditionally been studied in the agent field, such as task allocation and coalition formation, planning and coordination, and machine learning, are relevant for robotics researchers too. Of special interest in this year's ARMS workshop is the connection between robotics and agency on the subject of planning for, and coordination of mobile robots.
  ATESAddressing the  challenges of mitigating climate change and ensuring energy security in the  face of dwindling oil and gas reserves, requires a radical change in the way in  which energy use is managed. The distributed nature of many of these energy  systems, and the autonomous behaviour expected of them, naturally lend  themselves to a multi-agent methodology, and this workshop provides a forum for  agent researchers to present novel results in this exciting and increasingly  important application domain.
 
  
 CAREDo you  care?  For the lifetime value of  customers, patients, products, information, and plan execution? If yes,  then how do you work together with those that  care for the same entity? Collaborative care is today’s primary means to  achieve complex outcomes and to increase the lifetime value of the cared  entities. Collaboration enables agents to achieve complex goals that are  difficult or impossible to attain for an individual agent. This collaboration  takes place under conditions of incomplete information, uncertainty, and  bounded rationality, much of which has been previously studied in economics and  artificial intelligence. However, many real world domains are characterised by  even greater complexity, including the possibility of unreliable and  non-complying collaborators, complex market and incentive frameworks, and  complex transaction costs and organisational structures. How can we create  computational models, representations, algorithms and protocols to enable the  next generation of intelligent collaborative care technologies? How can we  build technologies that support collaboration under this complexity and  uncertainty?
 This workshop  aims to foster discussions on computational models of collaboration support in  distributed systems, addressing a range of theoretical and practical issues.
 
  
 
 COINThe 12th  International Workshop on Coordination, Organization, Institutions and Norms in  Multi-Agent Systems (COIN@AAMAS2011) aims to bring together researchers in  autonomous agents and multi-agent systems working on the scientific and  technological aspects of social coordination, organizational theory, artificial  or electronic institutions and normative systems for the exchange of ideas and  discussion about future developments in the field.
 
  
 CoopMASThe use of cooperative game theory to study how agents  should cooperate and collaborate, along with the related topic of coalition  formation, has received growing attention from the multiagent systems, game  theory, and electronic commerce communities. The focus of much of the current  work in this area has been on exploring methods by which agents can form  coalitions so as to solve problems of joint interest, make group decisions, and  distribute gains arising from such cooperation.
 
  
 DALT 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.
 
  
 DOCM3AS To  understand mega-scale complex systems, such as human society, technologies for  simulation, knowledge discovery, and computational modeling are required.  Although researchers on multi-agent simulation (MASim) and massively  multi-agent systems (MMAS) are good at working on the implementation of tools  for multi-agent simulations and the design of computational model, they are not  necessarily experts who can extract essentials of complex systems. On the other  hand, data mining (DM) researchers are technicians for knowledge discovery  though, it is usually hard for them to actively analyze obtained knowledge  through simulations. There is the complementary relationship among MASim/MMAS  and DM researches. Therefore, the primary aim of this workshop is to facilitate  the collaboration among researchers on MASim, DM, and MMAS for creating new  multi-agent research area by synthesizing diverse and different  technologies/methodologies.
  
 ITMAS
 ITMAS aims at  discussing issues on the design and implementation of infrastructures and tools  for Multiagent Systems. When developing applications based on Multiagent  Systems, developers and users demand infrastructures and tools which support  essential features in Multiagent Systems (such as agent organizations,  mobility, etc.) and facilitate the system design, management, execution and  evaluation. Agent infrastructures are usually built using other technologies  such as grid systems, service-oriented architectures, P2P networks, etc. In  this sense, the integration and interoperability of such technologies in Multiagent  Systems is also a challenging issue in the area of both tools and  infrastructures for Multiagent Systems.
 
  
 MABSMulti-Agent  Based Simulation (MABS) is a vibrant inter-disciplinary area which brings  together researchers from within the agent-based social simulation (ABSS) and  the Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) communities. The focus of ABSS is on simulating  and synthesising social behaviour in order to understand real social systems  via the development and testing of new concepts. The focus of MAS is on the  solution of difficult engineering problems related to the construction,  deployment and efficient operation of Multi-Agent Systems. The MABS workshop  series continues to pursue its goal to bring together researchers interested in  MAS engineering, with ABSS researchers focused on finding effective solutions  to modelling complex social systems, in such areas as economics, management,  and organizational and social sciences in general.
 
  
 MSDMIn sequential  decision making, an agent's objective is to choose actions, based on its observations  of the world, that will maximize its performance over the course of a series of  such decisions.  The MSDM workshop  focuses on extensions of principled single-agent models (e.g., MDPs and POMDPs)  and methods (e.g., planning and learning) to systems of multiple agents.  Over the past decade, a variety of different  multiagent models have emerged for cooperative agents (e.g., the MMDP,  Dec-POMDP, and MTDP) as well as for self-interested agents (e.g., the I-POMDP  and POSG).   The purpose of this workshop  is to bring together researchers to present new work, to identify recent trends  in model and algorithmic development, and to discuss interesting and  challenging application areas (e.g., cooperative robotics, distributed sensor  and/or communication networks, decision support systems) and suitable  evaluation methodologies.
 
  OPTMAS The number of  novel applications of multi-agent systems has followed an exponential trend  over the last few years, ranging from online auction design, through in  multi-sensor networks, to scheduling of tasks in multi-actor systems.  Multi-agent systems designed for all these applications generally require some  form of optimization in order to achieve their goal. Given this, a number of  advancements have been made in the design of winner determination, coalition  formation, and distributed constraints optimization algorithms among others.  However, there are no general principles guiding the design of such algorithms  that would enable researchers to either exploit solutions designed in other areas or to ensure that  their algorithms conform to some level of applicability to real problems. This  workshop aims to address the above issues by bringing together researchers from  different parts of the Multi-Agent Systems research area to present their work  and discuss acceptable solutions, benchmarks, and evaluation methods for  generally researched optimization problems.
  ProMASIt is imperative  to support the ever more complex task of professional programmers of  multi-agent systems. Importantly, such languages and tools must be developed in  a principled but practical way. ProMAS aims to address both theoretical and  practical issues related to developing and deploying multi-agent systems.  ProMAS promotes the discussion and exchange of ideas concerning the techniques,  concepts, requirements, and principles that are important for multi-agent programming  technology. These include the theory and applications of agent programming  languages, how to effectively implement a multi-agent system design or  specification, the verification and analysis of agent systems, as well as the  implementation of social structures in agent-based systems
 
  
 TrustTrust and  Trustworthiness (along with related concepts such as privacy, reputation,  security, control) have become major research topics in computer science. Although  there is increasing interest in this area within the AAMAS community, this area  will need continued support as an affiliated workshop in which are explored new  directions and inter-disciplinary interactions so that the AAMAS community  maintains a venue for research into trust, reputation, and related topics. In  the workshop of this edition we will give a special attention about the theme of "TRUST  IN SOCIAL COMPUTING". In fact the relationships between social behavior  and computational systems are becoming increasingly interwined with interesting  bilateral influences. The role of Trust and Reputation has to be deeply  analyzed and understood in this new interactional paradigm. The aim of the  workshop is to bring together researchers (even from different disciplines) who  can contribute to a better understanding of trust and reputation in agent  societies.
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