[agents] Call for Participation The 13th International Workshop on Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations (ACAN2022)

Reyhan Aydogan reyhan.aydogan at gmail.com
Mon Jun 20 02:21:27 EDT 2022


*The 13th International Workshop on Agent-based Complex Automated
Negotiations (ACAN2022) in conjunction with IJCAI-ECAI2022*

Complex Automated Negotiations have been widely studied and are one of the
emerging areas of research in the field of Autonomous Agents and
Multi-Agent Systems. These days, AI systems are being developed by
companies and organizations to solve various problems. The extensive use of
heterogeneous AI systems requires coordination mechanisms based on
automated negotiation technologies that could account for the complexity of
our society.

The complexity in an automated negotiation depends on several factors: the
number of negotiated issues, dependencies between these issues,
representation of the utility, negotiation procedural and protocol,
negotiation form (bilateral or multi-party), time constraints, negotiation
goals, and so on. Complex automated negotiation scenarios are concerned
with negotiation encounters where we may have for instance, a large number
of agents, a large number of issues with strong interdependencies, real
time constraints, concurrent and inter-depended negotiation, etc. Many real
world negotiation scenarios present one or more of the mentioned elements.
Software agents can support the automation of complex negotiations, by
negotiating on behalf of their owners and providing adequate strategies to
them to achieve realistic, win-win agreements. In order to provide
solutions in such complex automated negotiation scenarios, research has
focused on incorporating different technologies including search, CSP,
graphical utility models, Bayesian nets, auctions, utility graphs,
optimization and predicting and learning methods. The applications of
complex automated negotiations could include e-commerce tools,
decision-making support tools, negotiation support tools, collaboration
tools, as well as knowledge discovery and agent learning tools.

ACAN2022 will discuss, among others, the following aspects and topics of
such complex automated negotiations within the field of Autonomous Agents
and Multi-Agent Systems, which have distinct relationships with IJCAI main
conference topics:

- Complex Automated Negotiations Frameworks and Mechanisms
- Bilateral and Multilateral Negotiations
- High dimension Multi-Issue Negotiations
- Large Scale Negotiations
- Concurrent Negotiations
- Multiple Negotiations
- Sequential Negotiations
- Negotiations under Asymmetric Information
- Prediction of Opponent's Behaviors and Strategies in Negotiations
- Machine Learning in Negotiations
- Simulation Models and Platforms for Complex Negotiations
- Coordination Mechanisms for Complex Negotiations
- Matchmaking and Brokering Mechanisms
- Utility and Preference Elicitation Technologies in Negotiations
- Utility and Preference Representations in Negotiations
- Computational Complexity of Multi-Issue Negotiations
- Negotiations with Humans, Negotiations in Social Networks etc.
- Knowledge Management in Automated Negotiations.
- Moral consideration for automated negotiations.
- Real-life Aspects of Electronic Negotiations
- Applications for Automated Negotiations (e.g. cloud computing, smart
grid, electronic commerce etc.)

A considerable number of researchers in various sub-communities of
autonomous agents and multi-agent systems are actively working on these and
related issues. They are, for instance, being studied in agent
negotiations, multi-issue negotiations, auctions, mechanism design,
electronic commerce, voting, secure protocols, matchmaking and brokering,
argumentation, co-operation mechanisms and distributed optimization.

The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers from these
communities to learn about each other's approaches to the complex
negotiation problems, encourages the exchange of ideas between the
different areas, and potentially fosters long-term research collaborations
to accelerate progress towards scaling up to larger and more realistic
applications.

*** Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC) Special Session ***

Since 2010, ACAN has been cooperating with ANAC (Automated Negotiating
Agents Competition). This year, we have an ANAC special session, in which
we plan to explain and discuss the research challenges addressed in ANAC
2020-2022. The participants with winning negotiation strategies, especially
in ANAC 2020 and ANAC 2021, are invited to submit their paper.

*** Important dates ***

ACAN-22: July 24

*** Registration ***

Registration page: https://ijcai-22.org/register/


*** Organizing Committee ***

- Dr. Rafik Hadfi (Organizing Co-Chair, Primary Contact Person)
Assistant Professor. Kyoto University, Japan
- Dr. Takayuki Ito (Organizing Co-Chair)
Professor. Kyoto University, Japan
- Dr. Reyhan Aydoğan (Organizing Co-chair)
Assistant Professor. Özyeğin University, Turkey
- Dr. Ryuta Arisaka (Organizing Co-Chair)
Assistant Professor. Kyoto University, Japan

*** Program Committee Members ***

- Dr. Tim Baarslag (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI), the Netherlands)
- Dr. Quan Bai (University of Tasmania, Australia)
- Prof. Dr. Miguel Angel Lopez Carmona (University of Alcara, Spain)
- Prof. Susel Fernandez (University of Alcara, Spain)
- Dr. Enrico Gerding (University of Southampton, UK)
- Dr. Koen Hindriks (Vrije Universiteit The Netherlands)
- Dr. Dave de Jonge (IIIA-CSIC, Spain)
- Prof. Dr. Catholjin Jonker (Delft University of Technology, The
Netherlands)
- Dr. Mark Klein (MIT, USA)
- Prof. Dr. Sarit Kraus (Bar-Ilan University, Israel)
- Dr. Weihua Li (Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand)
- Dr. Jiamou Liu, (Auckland University, New Zealand)
- Prof. Dr. Ivan Marsa Maestre (University of Alcara, Spain)
- Dr. Shun Okuhara (Mie University, Japan)
- Prof. Takanobu Otsuka (Nagoya Institute of Technology, Japan)
- Dr. Fenghui Ren (University of Wollongong, Australia)
- Dr. Victor Sanchez-Anguix (Politecnica de Valencia, Spain)
- Prof. Dr. Katia Sycara (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
- Prof. Gu Wen (JAIST, Japan)
- Prof. Jawad Haqbeen (Kyoto University, Japan)
- Prof. Sofia Sahab (Kyoto University, Japan)
- Dr. Amro Najjar (Université du Luxembourg)
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