


default search action
AAMAS 2010: Toronto, Canada
- Wiebe van der Hoek, Gal A. Kaminka, Yves Lespérance, Michael Luck, Sandip Sen:

9th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS 2010), Toronto, Canada, May 10-14, 2010, Volume 1-3. IFAAMAS 2010, ISBN 978-0-9826571-1-9
Best paper and best student paper nominations
- W. Bradley Knox, Peter Stone:

Combining manual feedback with subsequent MDP reward signals for reinforcement learning. 5-12 - Zsolt Kira:

Inter-robot transfer learning for perceptual classification. 13-20 - Robin Glinton, Paul Scerri, Katia P. Sycara:

Exploiting scale invariant dynamics for efficient information propagation in large teams. 21-30 - Jonathan Sorg, Satinder Singh:

Linear options. 31-38 - Perukrishnen Vytelingum, Thomas Voice, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Agent-based micro-storage management for the Smart Grid. 39-46 - Felix Brandt, Markus Brill, Felix A. Fischer, Paul Harrenstein:

Minimal retentive sets in tournaments. 47-58
Virtual agents I
- Mark Hoogendoorn, Jeremy Soumokil:

Evaluation of virtual agents utilizing theory of mind in a real time action game. 59-66 - Xiaoxun Sun, William Yeoh, Sven Koenig:

Moving target D* Lite. 67-74 - Christopher Amato, Guy Shani:

High-level reinforcement learning in strategy games. 75-82 - Eurico Doirado, Carlos Martinho:

I mean it!: detecting user intentions to create believable behaviour for virtual agents in games. 83-90 - Hendrik Buschmeier, Kirsten Bergmann, Stefan Kopp:

Adaptive expressiveness: virtual conversational agents that can align to their interaction partner. 91-98 - Birgit Endrass, Elisabeth André

, Lixing Huang, Jonathan Gratch:
A data-driven approach to model culture-specific communication management styles for virtual agents. 99-108
Coordination and cooperation I
- Matthew E. Taylor, Manish Jain, Yanquin Jin, Makoto Yokoo, Milind Tambe:

When should there be a "Me" in "Team"?: distributed multi-agent optimization under uncertainty. 109-116 - Peter Stone, Sarit Kraus:

To teach or not to teach?: decision making under uncertainty in ad hoc teams. 117-124 - Tomasz P. Michalak, Dorota Marciniak, Marcin Szamotulski, Talal Rahwan, Michael J. Wooldridge, Peter McBurney, Nicholas R. Jennings:

A logic-based representation for coalitional games with externalities. 125-132 - Christopher Kiekintveld, Zhengyu Yin, Atul Kumar, Milind Tambe:

Asynchronous algorithms for approximate distributed constraint optimization with quality bounds. 133-140 - Ismel Brito, Pedro Meseguer:

Improving DPOP with function filtering. 141-148 - Meritxell Vinyals, Marc Pujol-Gonzalez, Juan A. Rodríguez-Aguilar, Jesús Cerquides:

Divide-and-coordinate: DCOPs by agreement. 149-156
Game theory I
- Nicholas Abou Risk, Duane Szafron:

Using counterfactual regret minimization to create competitive multiplayer poker agents. 159-166 - Stéphane Airiau, Ulle Endriss:

Multiagent resource allocation with sharable items: simple protocols and Nash equilibria. 167-174 - Bikramjit Banerjee, Landon Kraemer:

Coalition structure generation in multi-agent systems with mixed externalities. 175-182 - Sam Ganzfried, Tuomas Sandholm:

Computing equilibria by incorporating qualitative models? 183-190 - Ashton Anderson, Yoav Shoham, Alon Altman:

Internal implementation. 191-198 - Albert Xin Jiang, MohammadAli Safari:

Pure Nash equilibria: complete characterization of hard and easy graphical games. 199-206
Trust
- Paul-Amaury Matt, Maxime Morge, Francesca Toni:

Combining statistics and arguments to compute trust. 209-216 - Ramón Hermoso, Holger Billhardt, Sascha Ossowski:

Role evolution in Open Multi-Agent Systems as an information source for trust. 217-224 - George Vogiatzis, Ian MacGillivray, Maria Chli:

A probabilistic model for trust and reputation. 225-232 - Jie Tang, Sven Seuken, David C. Parkes:

Hybrid transitive trust mechanisms. 233-240 - Chris Burnett, Timothy J. Norman, Katia P. Sycara:

Bootstrapping trust evaluations through stereotypes. 241-248 - Nathan Griffiths, Michael Luck:

Changing neighbours: improving tag-based cooperation. 249-256
Agent reasoning I
- Chitta Baral, Gregory Gelfond, Tran Cao Son, Enrico Pontelli:

Using answer set programming to model multi-agent scenarios involving agents' knowledge about other's knowledge. 259-266 - Meir Kalech, Avi Pfeffer:

Decision making with dynamically arriving information. 267-274 - Xiaocong Fan, Meng Su:

Using geometric diffusions for recognition-primed multi-agent decision making. 275-282 - Shakil M. Khan, Yves Lespérance:

A logical framework for prioritized goal change. 283-290 - James C. Boerkoel Jr., Edmund H. Durfee, Keith Purrington:

Generalized solution techniques for preference-based constrained optimization with CP-nets. 291-298 - John P. Dickerson, Gerardo I. Simari, V. S. Subrahmanian, Sarit Kraus:

A graph-theoretic approach to protect static and moving targets from adversaries. 299-306
Learning I
- Michael Kaisers, Karl Tuyls

:
Frequency adjusted multi-agent Q-learning. 309-316 - Bruno Norberto da Silva, Alan K. Mackworth:

Using spatial hints to improve policy reuse in a reinforcement learning agent. 317-324 - Dhirendra Singh, Sebastian Sardiña, Lin Padgham, Stéphane Airiau:

Learning context conditions for BDI plan selection. 325-332 - Nathan R. Sturtevant, Vadim Bulitko, Yngvi Björnsson:

On learning in agent-centered search. 333-340 - Peng Zang, Arya Irani, Peng Zhou, Charles Lee Isbell Jr., Andrea Lockerd Thomaz:

Using training regimens to teach expanding function approximators. 341-348 - Marek Grzes, Daniel Kudenko:

PAC-MDP learning with knowledge-based admissible models. 349-358
Social choice I
- Ulle Endriss, Umberto Grandi, Daniele Porello:

Complexity of judgment aggregation: safety of the agenda. 359-366 - Piotr Faliszewski, Edith Hemaspaandra, Henning Schnoor:

Manipulation of copeland elections. 367-374 - Edith Elkind, Piotr Faliszewski, Arkadii M. Slinko:

On the role of distances in defining voting rules. 375-382 - Boris Golden, Patrice Perny:

Infinite order Lorenz dominance for fair multiagent optimization. 383-390 - Bart de Keijzer, Tomas Klos, Yingqian Zhang:

Enumeration and exact design of weighted voting games. 391-398 - Lirong Xia, Vincent Conitzer, Jérôme Lang:

Aggregating preferences in multi-issue domains by using maximum likelihood estimators. 399-408
Agreement technologies
- Davide Grossi:

On the logic of argumentation theory. 409-416 - Iyad Rahwan, Fernando Tohmé:

Collective argument evaluation as judgement aggregation. 417-424 - Ivan Marsá-Maestre, Miguel A. López-Carmona, Juan R. Velasco, Enrique de la Hoz:

Avoiding the prisoner's dilemma in auction-based negotiations for highly rugged utility spaces. 425-432 - Paul Martin, David Robertson, Michael Rovatsos:

Opportunistic belief reconciliation during distributed interactions. 433-440 - Nabila Hadidi, Yannis Dimopoulos, Pavlos Moraitis:

Argumentative alternating offers. 441-448 - Efthimios Bothos, Dimitris Apostolou, Gregoris Mentzas:

Agent based information aggregation markets. 449-454
KR/AAMAS joint session I
- Amit K. Chopra, Fabiano Dalpiaz, Paolo Giorgini, John Mylopoulos:

Reasoning about agents and protocols via goals and commitments. 457-464 - Murat Sensoy, Wamberto Weber Vasconcelos, Timothy J. Norman:

Flexible task resourcing for intelligent agents. 465-472 - Nicolas Troquard, Dirk Walther:

Alternating-time dynamic logic. 473-480 - Natasha Alechina, Brian Logan, Nguyen Hoang Nga, Abdur Rakib:

Resource-bounded alternating-time temporal logic. 481-488
KR/AAMAS joint session II
- Giuseppe De Giacomo, Fabio Patrizi, Sebastian Sardiña:

Agent programming via planning programs. 491-498 - Giuseppe De Giacomo, Paolo Felli:

Agent composition synthesis based on ATL. 499-506
Simulation
- Julien Siebert, Laurent Ciarletta, Vincent Chevrier:

Agents and artefacts for multiple models co-evolution: building complex system simulation as a set of interacting models. 509-516 - Sherief Abdallah:

Using graph analysis to study networks of adaptive agent. 517-524 - Tibor Bosse, Charlotte Gerritsen:

An agent-based framework to support crime prevention. 525-532 - Nazim Fatès, Vincent Chevrier:

How important are updating schemes in multi-agent systems? An illustration on a multi-turmite model. 533-540 - David Scerri, Alexis Drogoul, Sarah L. Hickmott, Lin Padgham:

An architecture for modular distributed simulation with agent-based models. 541-548 - H. Van Dyke Parunak, Robert Bisson, Sven A. Brueckner:

Agent interaction, multiple perspectives, and swarming simulation. 549-556
Robotics I
- George Chrysanthakopoulos, Guy Shani:

Augmenting appearance-based localization and navigation using belief update. 559-566 - Asaf Shiloni, Alon Levy, Ariel Felner, Meir Kalech:

Ants meeting algorithms. 567-574 - Stephen J. Guy, Ming C. Lin, Dinesh Manocha:

Modeling collision avoidance behavior for virtual humans. 575-582 - Frederic Py, Kanna Rajan, Conor McGann:

A systematic agent framework for situated autonomous systems. 583-590 - Noa Agmon:

On events in multi-robot patrol in adversarial environments. 591-598 - Grégory Mermoud, Loïc Matthey, William C. Evans, Alcherio Martinoli:

Aggregation-mediated collective perception and action in a group of miniature robots. 599-606
Economic paradigms I
- Reshef Meir, Ariel D. Procaccia, Jeffrey S. Rosenschein:

On the limits of dictatorial classification. 609-616 - Yoram Bachrach:

Honor among thieves: collusion in multi-unit auctions. 617-624 - Abraham Othman, Tuomas Sandholm:

Decision rules and decision markets. 625-632 - Atsushi Iwasaki, Vincent Conitzer, Yoshifusa Omori, Yuko Sakurai, Taiki Todo, Mingyu Guo, Makoto Yokoo:

Worst-case efficiency ratio in false-name-proof combinatorial auction mechanisms. 633-640 - Magnus Roos, Jörg Rothe:

Complexity of social welfare optimization in multiagent resource allocation. 641-648 - Enrico H. Gerding, Sebastian Stein, Kate Larson, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Scalable mechanism design for the procurement of services with uncertain durations. 649-656
Verification
- Alessio Lomuscio, Wojciech Penczek, Hongyang Qu:

Partial order reductions for model checking temporal epistemic logics over interleaved multi-agent systems. 659-666 - Thomas Ågotnes, Michael J. Wooldridge:

Optimal social laws. 667-674 - Andrew V. Jones, Alessio Lomuscio:

Distributed BDD-based BMC for the verification of multi-agent systems. 675-682 - Jan M. Broersen:

CTL.STIT: enhancing ATL to express important multi-agent system verification properties. 683-690 - Ioana Boureanu, Mika Cohen, Alessio Lomuscio:

Model checking detectability of attacks in multiagent systems. 691-698 - Nils Bulling, Wojciech Jamroga:

Verifying agents with memory is harder than it seemed. 699-706
Learning II
- Gheorghe Comanici, Doina Precup:

Optimal policy switching algorithms for reinforcement learning. 709-714 - Yann-Michaël De Hauwere, Peter Vrancx, Ann Nowé:

Learning multi-agent state space representations. 715-722 - Matteo Leonetti, Luca Iocchi:

Improving the performance of complex agent plans through reinforcement learning. 723-730 - David B. D'Ambrosio, Joel Lehman, Sebastian Risi, Kenneth O. Stanley:

Evolving policy geometry for scalable multiagent learning. 731-738 - Chongjie Zhang, Victor R. Lesser, Sherief Abdallah:

Self-organization for coordinating decentralized reinforcement learning. 739-746 - Sarah Osentoski, Sridhar Mahadevan:

Basis function construction for hierarchical reinforcement learning. 747-754
Coordination and cooperation II
- Tammar Shrot, Yonatan Aumann, Sarit Kraus:

On agent types in coalition formation problems. 757-764 - Alexandros Belesiotis, Michael Rovatsos, Iyad Rahwan:

Agreeing on plans through iterated disputes. 765-772 - Jirí Vokrínek, Antonín Komenda, Michal Pechoucek:

Agents towards vehicle routing problems. 773-780 - Satomi Baba, Atsushi Iwasaki, Makoto Yokoo, Marius-Calin Silaghi, Katsutoshi Hirayama, Toshihiro Matsui:

Cooperative problem solving against adversary: quantified distributed constraint satisfaction problem. 781-788 - Léon Planken, Mathijs de Weerdt, Cees Witteveen:

Optimal temporal decoupling in multiagent systems. 789-796 - Evan Sultanik, Ali Shokoufandeh, William C. Regli:

Dominating sets of agents in visibility graphs: distributed algorithms for art gallery problems. 797-804
Agent societies
- Huib Aldewereld, Sergio Álvarez-Napagao, Frank Dignum, Javier Vázquez-Salceda:

Making norms concrete. 807-814 - Nir Oren, Michael Luck, Simon Miles:

A model of normative power. 815-822 - M. Birna van Riemsdijk, Koen V. Hindriks, Catholijn M. Jonker, Maarten Sierhuis:

Formalizing organizational constraints: a semantic approach. 823-830 - George Dimitri Christelis, Michael Rovatsos, Ronald P. A. Petrick:

Exploiting domain knowledge to improve norm synthesis. 831-838 - Jian Tang, Zhi Jin:

Assignment problem in requirements driven agent collaboration and its implementation. 839-846 - Michael Munie, Yoav Shoham:

Joint process games: from ratings to wikis. 847-854
Economic paradigms II
- Bing Shi, Enrico H. Gerding, Perukrishnen Vytelingum, Nicholas R. Jennings:

A game-theoretic analysis of market selection strategies for competing double auction marketplaces. 857-864 - Abraham Othman, Tuomas Sandholm:

When do markets with simple agents fail? 865-872 - Abraham Othman, Tuomas Sandholm, Eric Budish:

Finding approximate competitive equilibria: efficient and fair course allocation. 873-880 - Mingyu Guo, Vincent Conitzer:

Strategy-proof allocation of multiple items between two agents without payments or priors. 881-888 - Greg Hines, Kate Larson:

Preference elicitation for risky prospects. 889-896 - Perukrishnen Vytelingum, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Thomas Voice, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Trading agents for the smart electricity grid. 897-904
Robotics II
- Nelson Elhage, Jacob Beal:

Laplacian-based consensus on spatial computers. 907-914 - Stephanie Rosenthal, Joydeep Biswas, Manuela M. Veloso:

An effective personal mobile robot agent through symbiotic human-robot interaction. 915-922 - Dali Sun, Alexander Kleiner, Christian Schindelhauer:

Decentralized hash tables for mobile robot teams solving intra-logistics tasks. 923-930 - Murilo Fernandes Martins, Yiannis Demiris

:
Learning multirobot joint action plans from simultaneous task execution demonstrations. 931-938 - Nithin Mathews, Anders Lyhne Christensen, Eliseo Ferrante, Rehan O'Grady, Marco Dorigo:

Establishing spatially targeted communication in a heterogeneous robot swarm. 939-946 - Eric Raboin, Dana S. Nau, Ugur Kuter, Satyandra K. Gupta, Petr Svec:

Strategy generation in multi-agent imperfect-information pursuit games. 947-954
Agent-based system development
- Nick A. M. Tinnemeier, Mehdi Dastani, John-Jules Ch. Meyer:

Programming norm change. 957-964 - Lacramioara Astefanoaei, Frank S. de Boer, Mehdi Dastani:

Strategic executions of choreographed timed normative multi-agent systems. 965-972 - Bas R. Steunebrink, Mehdi Dastani, John-Jules Ch. Meyer:

Emotions to control agent deliberation. 973-980 - Bo An, Victor R. Lesser, David E. Irwin, Michael Zink:

Automated negotiation with decommitment for dynamic resource allocation in cloud computing. 981-988 - Xiaoping Chen, Jianmin Ji, Jiehui Jiang, Guoqiang Jin, Feng Wang, Jiongkun Xie:

Developing high-level cognitive functions for service robots. 989-996 - Mehdi Dastani, Wojciech Jamroga:

Reasoning about strategies of multi-agent programs. 997-1004
Distributed problem solving
- Tomasz P. Michalak, Jacek Sroka, Talal Rahwan, Michael J. Wooldridge, Peter McBurney, Nicholas R. Jennings:

A distributed algorithm for anytime coalition structure generation. 1007-1014 - Alon Grubshtein, Roie Zivan, Tal Grinshpoun, Amnon Meisels:

Local search for distributed asymmetric optimization. 1015-1022 - Toshihiro Matsui, Hiroshi Matsuo, Marius-Calin Silaghi, Katsutoshi Hirayama, Makoto Yokoo, Satomi Baba:

A quantified distributed constraint optimization problem. 1023-1030 - Viliam Lisý, Roie Zivan, Katia P. Sycara, Michal Pechoucek:

Deception in networks of mobile sensing agents. 1031-1038 - Renato L. G. Cavalcante, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings, Isao Yamada:

Distributed multiagent learning with a broadcast adaptive subgradient method. 1039-1046 - James Atlas, Keith Decker:

Coordination for uncertain outcomes using distributed neighbor exchange. 1047-1054
Agent reasoning II: planning
- Henning Schnoor:

Strategic planning for probabilistic games with incomplete information. 1057-1064 - Kengo Matsuta, Hayato Kobayashi, Ayumi Shinohara:

Multi-target adaptive A. 1065-1072 - Enrique Munoz de Cote, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Planning against fictitious players in repeated normal form games. 1073-1080 - Xiaoxun Sun, William Yeoh, Sven Koenig:

Generalized Fringe-Retrieving A*: faster moving target search on state lattices. 1081-1088 - Christopher Archibald, Alon Altman, Yoav Shoham:

Success, strategy and skill: an experimental study. 1089-1096 - Zinovi Rabinovich, Lachlan Dufton, Kate Larson, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Cultivating desired behaviour: policy teaching via environment-dynamics tweaks. 1097-1104
Game theory II
- Haris Aziz

, Felix Brandt, Paul Harrenstein:
Monotone cooperative games and their threshold versions. 1107-1114 - Frans A. Oliehoek, Matthijs T. J. Spaan, Jilles Steeve Dibangoye, Christopher Amato:

Heuristic search for identical payoff Bayesian games. 1115-1122 - Yoram Bachrach, Ely Porat:

Path disruption games. 1123-1130 - Patrick R. Jordan, L. Julian Schvartzman, Michael P. Wellman:

Strategy exploration in empirical games. 1131-1138 - Zhengyu Yin, Dmytro Korzhyk, Christopher Kiekintveld, Vincent Conitzer, Milind Tambe:

Stackelberg vs. Nash in security games: interchangeability, equivalence, and uniqueness. 1139-1146 - Davide Grossi, Paolo Turrini:

Dependence theory via game theory. 1147-1154
Coordination and cooperation III: approaches
- Achudhan Sivakumar, Colin Keng-Yan Tan:

UAV swarm coordination using cooperative control for establishing a wireless communications backbone. 1157-1164 - Ruben Stranders, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

A decentralised coordination algorithm for minimising conflict and maximising coverage in sensor networks. 1165-1172 - Arnaud Glad, Olivier Simonin, Olivier Buffet, François Charpillet:

Influence of different execution models on patrolling ant behaviors: from agents to robots. 1173-1180 - Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Maria Polukarov, Alessandro Farinelli, Ngoc Cuong Truong, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Coalition formation with spatial and temporal constraints. 1181-1188 - Chih-Han Yu, Justin Werfel, Radhika Nagpal:

Collective decision-making in multi-agent systems by implicit leadership. 1189-1196 - Brian Hrolenok, Sean Luke, Keith Sullivan, Christopher Vo:

Collaborative foraging using beacons. 1197-1204
Agent reasoning III
- Tim Miller, Peter McBurney:

Characterising and matching iterative and recursive agent interaction protocols. 1207-1214 - Quang Duong, Michael P. Wellman, Satinder Singh, Yevgeniy Vorobeychik:

History-dependent graphical multiagent models. 1215-1222 - Prashant Doshi, Xia Qu, Adam Goodie, Diana L. Young:

Modeling recursive reasoning by humans using empirically informed interactive POMDPs. 1223-1230 - Florent Teichteil-Königsbuch, Ugur Kuter, Guillaume Infantes:

Incremental plan aggregation for generating policies in MDPs. 1231-1238 - Célia da Costa Pereira, Andrea Tettamanzi:

An integrated possibilistic framework for goal generation in cognitive agents. 1239-1246 - Matthias Thimm, Alejandro Javier García:

Classification and strategical issues of argumentation games on structured argumentation frameworks. 1247-1254
Virtual agents II
- Jina Lee, Zhiyang Wang, Stacy Marsella:

Evaluating models of speaker head nods for virtual agents. 1257-1264 - Lixing Huang, Louis-Philippe Morency, Jonathan Gratch:

Parasocial consensus sampling: combining multiple perspectives to learn virtual human behavior. 1265-1272 - David Pardoe, Doran Chakraborty, Peter Stone:

TacTex09: a champion bidding agent for ad auctions. 1273-1280 - Hung-Hsuan Huang, Takuya Furukawa, Hiroki Ohashi, Toyoaki Nishida, Aleksandra Cerekovic, Igor S. Pandzic, Yukiko I. Nakano:

How multiple concurrent users react to a quiz agent attentive to the dynamics of their game participation. 1281-1288 - Mei Si, Stacy C. Marsella, David V. Pynadath:

Evaluating directorial control in a character-centric interactive narrative framework. 1289-1296 - Julie Porteous, Marc Cavazza, Fred Charles:

Narrative generation through characters' point of view. 1297-1304
ICAPS/AAMAS I
- Feng Wu, Shlomo Zilberstein, Xiaoping Chen:

Point-based policy generation for decentralized POMDPs. 1307-1314 - Akshat Kumar, Shlomo Zilberstein:

Point-based backup for decentralized POMDPs: complexity and new algorithms. 1315-1322 - Raz Nissim, Ronen I. Brafman, Carmel Domshlak:

A general, fully distributed multi-agent planning algorithm. 1323-1330 - Laura Barbulescu, Zachary B. Rubinstein, Stephen F. Smith, Terry L. Zimmerman:

Distributed coordination of mobile agent teams: the advantage of planning ahead. 1331-1338
ICAPS/AAMAS II
- Siddharth Srivastava, Neil Immerman, Shlomo Zilberstein:

Merging example plans into generalized plans for non-deterministic environments. 1341-1348 - Scott Sanner, William T. B. Uther, Karina Valdivia Delgado:

Approximate dynamic programming with affine ADDs. 1349-1356 - Janusz Marecki, Pradeep Varakantham:

Risk-sensitive planning in partially observable environments. 1357-1368
Extended abstracts
- Byron Boots, Sajid M. Siddiqi, Geoffrey J. Gordon:

Closing the learning-planning loop with predictive state representations. 1369-1370 - Federico Schlesinger, Marcelo Luis Errecalde, Guillermo Aguirre:

An approach to integrate web services and argumentation into a BDI system. 1371-1372 - Sara J. Casare, Anarosa A. F. Brandão, Jaime Simão Sichman:

A semiotic perspective for multiagent systems development. 1373-1374 - Hector G. Ceballos, Pablo Noriega, Francisco J. Cantu:

Requesting agent participation in electronic institutions. 1375-1376 - Nobel Khandaker, Leen-Kiat Soh:

ClassroomWiki: a wiki for the classroom with multiagent tracking, modeling, and group formation. 1377-1378 - Matteo Vasirani, Sascha Ossowski:

Accommodating driver preferences in reservation-based urban traffic management. 1379-1380 - Jiefei Ma, Alessandra Russo, Krysia Broda, Emil Lupu:

Distributed abductive reasoning with constraints. 1381-1382 - Natalia Criado, Estefania Argente, Vicente J. Botti:

A BDI architecture for normative decision making. 1383-1384 - Christopher Portway, Edmund H. Durfee:

The multi variable multi constrained distributed constraint optimization framework. 1385-1386 - Mirco Gelain, Maria Silvia Pini, Francesca Rossi, Kristen Brent Venable, Toby Walsh:

Male optimality and uniqueness in stable marriage problems with partial orders. 1387-1388 - Francisco S. Melo, Manuela M. Veloso:

Approximate planning for decentralized MDPs with sparse interactions. 1389-1390 - Roni Stern, Meir Kalech, Ariel Felner:

Searching for a k-clique in unknown graphs. 1391-1392 - Camille Besse, Brahim Chaib-draa:

Quasi deterministic POMDPs and DecPOMDPs. 1393-1394 - Damien Pellier, Bruno Bouzy, Marc Métivier:

A mean-based approach for real-time planning. 1395-1396 - Stefan J. Witwicki, Edmund H. Durfee:

From policies to influences: a framework for nonlocal abstraction in transition-dependent Dec-POMDP agents. 1397-1398 - Pablo Samuel Castro, Doina Precup:

Using bisimulation for policy transfer in MDPs. 1399-1400 - Luís Macedo:

The practical advantage of surprise-based agents. 1401-1402 - Xiaowei Huang

, Cheng Luo, Ron van der Meyden:
Improved bounded model checking for a fair branching-time temporal epistemic logic. 1403-1404 - Madalina Croitoru, Nir Oren, Simon Miles, Michael Luck:

Graphically explaining norms. 1405-1406 - Eduard Semsch, Michal Jakob, Dusan Pavlícek, Michal Pechoucek:

Occlusion-aware multi-UAV surveillance. 1407-1408 - Kennard R. Laviers, Gita Sukthankar:

Identifying and utilizing subgroup coordination patterns in team adversarial games. 1409-1410 - Travis C. Service, Julie A. Adams:

Anytime dynamic programming for coalition structure generation. 1411-1412 - Nicolas Stefanovitch, Alessandro Farinelli, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Efficient multi-agent coordination using resource-aware junction trees. 1413-1414 - Tony Wauters, Katja Verbeeck, Greet Vanden Berghe, Patrick De Causmaecker:

A game theoretic approach to decentralized multi-project scheduling. 1415-1416 - Melanie Smith, Roger Mailler:

Improving the efficiency of the distributed stochastic algorithm. 1417-1418 - Stefano Ermon, Carla P. Gomes, Bart Selman:

Collaborative multiagent Gaussian inference in a dynamic environment using belief propagation. 1419-1420 - James C. Boerkoel Jr., Edmund H. Durfee:

Partitioning the multiagent simple temporal problem for concurrency and privacy. 1421-1422 - Masahiro Ono, Brian C. Williams:

Market-based risk allocation for multi-agent systems. 1423-1424 - Vitaliy Freidovich, Amnon Meisels:

Asynchronous partitioning framework. 1425-1426 - Musad A. Haque, Amirreza Rahmani, Magnus Egerstedt:

Biologically inspired coalition formation of multi-agent systems. 1427-1428 - Daniela Scherer dos Santos, Ana L. C. Bazzan:

Distributed clustering for group formation and task allocation. 1429-1430 - Norman Salazar, Juan A. Rodríguez-Aguilar, Josep Lluís Arcos:

Convention emergence through spreading mechanisms. 1431-1432 - Pawel Dybala, Michal Ptaszynski, Rafal Rzepka, Kenji Araki:

Multi-humoroid: joking system that reacts with humor to humans' bad moods. 1433-1434 - Adam Setapen, Michael J. Quinlan, Peter Stone:

MARIOnET: motion acquisition for robots through iterative online evaluative training. 1435-1436 - Albert Trias i Mansilla, Josep Lluís de la Rosa, Boris A. Galitsky, Gabor Dobrocsi:

Automation of social networks with QA agents. 1437-1438 - Peter Vrancx, Katja Verbeeck, Ann Nowé:

Taking turns in general sum Markov games. 1439-1440 - Matt Knudson, Kagan Tumer:

Robot coordination with ad-hoc team formation. 1441-1442 - Razvan Dinu, Tiberiu Stratulat, Jacques Ferber:

A formal approach to MASQ. 1443-1444 - Alan R. Wagner:

Using stereotypes to understand one's interactive partner. 1445-1446 - Yanjing Wang, Floor Sietsma, Jan van Eijck:

Logic of information flow on communication channels. 1447-1448 - Alessio Lomuscio, Monika Solanki, Wojciech Penczek, Maciej Szreter:

Runtime monitoring of contract regulated web services. 1449-1450 - David Sarne, Simon Shamoun, Eli Rata:

Iterative expanding search in multi-agent systems. 1451-1452 - Jason Tsai, Zhengyu Yin, Jun-young Kwak, David Kempe, Christopher Kiekintveld, Milind Tambe:

How to protect a city: strategic security placement in graph-based domains. 1453-1454 - Arthur Carvalho, Kate Larson:

Sharing a reward based on peer evaluations. 1455-1456 - Dimitrios Antos, Avi Pfeffer:

Representing Bayesian games without a common prior. 1457-1458 - Aadithya V. Karthik, Balaraman Ravindran:

Game theoretic network centrality: exact formulas and efficient algorithms. 1459-1460 - Simon Andrew Williamson, Archie C. Chapman, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Valuing search and communication in partially-observable coordination problems. 1461-1462 - Andrew Gilpin, Tuomas Sandholm:

Speeding up gradient-based algorithms for sequential games. 1463-1464 - Joseph Y. Halpern, Nan Rong:

Cooperative equilibrium. 1465-1466 - Christopher Kiekintveld, Milind Tambe, Janusz Marecki:

Robust Bayesian methods for Stackelberg security games. 1467-1468 - Sofia Ceppi, Nicola Gatti, Giorgio Patrini, Marco Rocco:

Local search techniques for computing equilibria in two-player general-sum strategic-form games. 1469-1470 - Piotr Krysta, Tomasz P. Michalak, Tuomas Sandholm, Michael J. Wooldridge:

Combinatorial auctions with externalities. 1471-1472 - Jinzhong Niu, Kai Cai, Simon Parsons:

A grey-box approach to automated mechanism design. 1473-1474 - Mingyu Guo, Vincent Conitzer:

False-name-proofness with bid withdrawal. 1475-1476 - Ruggiero Cavallo:

Efficient mechanisms with small subsidies. 1477-1478 - Yevgeniy Vorobeychik, Yagil Engel:

Incentive analysis of approximately efficient allocation algorithms. 1479-1480 - David Loker, Kate Larson:

An investigation of representations of combinatorial auctions. 1481-1482 - David Loker, Kate Larson:

Parameterizing the winner determination problem for combinatorial auctions. 1483-1484 - Valentin Robu, Ioannis A. Vetsikas, Enrico H. Gerding, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Flexibly priced options: a new mechanism for sequential auction markets with complementary goods. 1485-1486 - Andreas Witzel, Ulle Endriss:

Time constraints in mixed multi-unit combinatorial auctions. 1487-1488 - Sofia Ceppi, Nicola Gatti:

An algorithmic game theory framework for bilateral bargaining with uncertainty. 1489-1490 - Ben-Alexander Cassell, Michael P. Wellman:

Agent-based analysis of asset pricing under ambiguous information. 1493-1494 - Dayong Ye, Minjie Zhang, Danny Sutanto:

Self-organisation in an agent network via learning. 1495-1496 - Sindhu Joseph, Carles Sierra, W. Marco Schorlemmer:

A coherence-driven action selection in dynamic environments. 1497-1498 - Aravindhan K. Krishnan, K. Madhava Krishna, Supreeth Achar:

Image based exploration for indoor environments using local features. 1499-1500 - Pooyan Fazli, Alireza Davoodi, Philippe Pasquier, Alan K. Mackworth:

Multi-robot area coverage with limited visibility. 1501-1502 - J. M. George, José Pinto, P. B. Sujit, João B. Sousa

:
Multiple UAV coalition formation strategies. 1503-1504 - Bennie Lewis, Bulent Tastan, Gita Sukthankar:

Improving multi-robot teleoperation by inferring operator distraction. 1505-1506 - José N. Pereira, Anders Lyhne Christensen, Porfírio Silva, Pedro U. Lima:

Coordination through institutional roles in robot collectives. 1507-1508 - Somchaya Liemhetcharat, Manuela M. Veloso:

Mutual state capability-based role assignment model. 1509-1510 - Bernd Brüggemann, Dirk Schulz:

Coordinated navigation for multi-robot systems with additional constraints. 1511-1512 - Çetin Meriçli, Tekin Meriçli, H. Levent Akin:

A reward function generation method using genetic algorithms: a robot soccer case study. 1513-1514 - Piyoosh Mukhija, Rahul Sawhney, K. Madhava Krishna:

Multi robotic exploration with communication requirement to a fixed base station. 1515-1516 - Rehan O'Grady, Anders Lyhne Christensen, Carlo Pinciroli, Marco Dorigo:

Robots autonomously self-assemble into dedicated morphologies to solve different tasks. 1517-1518 - Kenny Daniel, Richard B. Borie, Sven Koenig, Craig A. Tovey:

ESP: pursuit evasion on series-parallel graphs. 1519-1520 - Vittorio A. Ziparo, Luca Iocchi, Matteo Leonetti, Daniele Nardi:

On-line robot execution monitoring using probabilistic action duration. 1521-1522 - Thibault Kruse, Alexandra Kirsch, Emrah Akin Sisbot, Rachid Alami:

Dynamic generation and execution of human aware navigation plans. 1523-1524 - Jeff Orkin, Deb K. Roy:

Toward an interleaved model of actions and words in social simulation. 1525-1526 - Jonathan Y. Ito, David V. Pynadath, Liz Sonenberg, Stacy C. Marsella:

Wishful thinking in effective decision making. 1527-1528 - Michael Brenner:

Dynamic plot generation by continual multiagent planning. 1529-1530 - Rossana Damiano, Vincenzo Lombardo:

Directing value: driven artificial characters. 1531-1532 - Zheng Li, Xia Mao:

Emotional eye movement markup language for virtual agents. 1533-1534 - Nikolaus Bee, Johannes Wagner, Elisabeth André

, Fred Charles, David Pizzi, Marc Cavazza:
Multimodal interaction with a virtual character in interactive storytelling. 1535-1536 - Olivier Gasquet, François Schwarzentruber

:
Knowledge in lineland. 1537-1538 - Mark Dras, Debbie Richards, Meredith Taylor, Mary Gardiner:

Deceptive agents and language. 1539-1540 - Maíra A. de C. Gatti, Carlos José Pereira de Lucena, Simon Miles, Nir Oren, Michael Luck:

A simulation approach to design contracts that govern emergent multi-agent systems. 1541-1542 - Yukihisa Fujita

, Yuichi Washida, Fujio Toriumi, Kazuhiro Ueda, Kenichiro Ishii:
Reversal of influence: decrease of innovator's influence under information diversification. 1543-1544 - Michael Garlick, Maria Chli:

An agent-based simulation of lock-in dynamics in a duopoly. 1545-1546 - Yoann Kubera, Philippe Mathieu, Sébastien Picault:

Everything can be agent! 1547-1548 - H. Van Dyke Parunak:

Generation and analysis of multiple futures with swarming agents. 1549-1550 - Bikramjit Banerjee, Landon Kraemer:

Validation of agent based crowd egress simulation. 1551-1552 - Scott Langevin, Marco Valtorta, Mark Bloemeke:

Agent-encapsulated Bayesian networks and the rumor problem. 1553-1554 - Mohamed El-Menshawy, Wei Wan, Jamal Bentahar, Rachida Dssouli:

Symbolic model checking for agent interactions. 1555-1556 - Jamal Bentahar:

An agent communication protocol for resolving conflicts. 1557-1558 - Paul Karaenke, Stefan Kirn:

Towards model checking & simulation of a multi-tier negotiation protocol for service chains. 1559-1560 - Murat Sensoy:

Distributed semantic search for the web: a multiagent approach. 1561-1562 - Adrián Perreau de Pinninck, W. Marco Schorlemmer, Carles Sierra, Stephen Cranefield:

A social-network defence against whitewashing. 1563-1564 - Zahra Kodia

, Lamjed Ben Said, Khaled Ghédira:
Towards a new cognitive modeling approach for multi-agent based simulation of stock market dynamics. 1565-1566 - Pierpaolo Dondio, Stephen Barrett:

Argumentation vs aggregation of trust evidence. 1567-1568 - Michael Brennan, Stacey Wrazien, Rachel Greenstadt:

Using machine learning to augment collaborative filtering of community discussions. 1569-1570 - Andrew Koster, Jordi Sabater-Mir, W. Marco Schorlemmer:

Inductively generated trust alignments based on shared interactions. 1571-1572 - Sandip Sen, Kuheli Chakraborty:

Comprehensive trust management. 1573-1574 - Guanfeng Liu, Yan Wang, Mehmet A. Orgun:

Quality of trust for social trust path selection in complex social networks. 1575-1576 - Siyuan Liu, Chunyan Miao, Yin Leng Theng, Alex C. Kot:

A clustering approach to filtering unfair testimonies for reputation systems. 1577-1578 - Thuc Vu, Yoav Shoham:

Optimal seeding in knockout tournaments. 1579-1580 - Tomas Trescak, Marc Esteva, Inmaculada Rodríguez:

Virtual world grammar. 1581-1582 - Doran Chakraborty, Peter Stone:

Online model learning in adversarial Markov decision processes. 1583-1584 - Bikramjit Banerjee, Landon Kraemer:

Action discovery for reinforcement learning. 1585-1586 - Aaron Wilson, Alan Fern, Prasad Tadepalli

:
Bayesian role discovery for multi-agent reinforcement learning. 1587-1588 - Jan Hendrik Metzen, Frank Kirchner:

Model-based direct policy search. 1589-1590 - Raymond Chiong, Michael Kirley:

Co-evolution of agent strategies in N-player dilemmas. 1591-1592 - Praveen Paruchuri, Pradeep Varakantham, Katia P. Sycara, Paul Scerri:

Analyzing the impact of human bias on human-agent teams in resource allocation domains. 1593-1594 - Taichi Hasegawa, Hajime Sawamura:

Syncretic argumentation by lattice homomorphism and fusion. 1595-1596 - Chukwuemeka David Emele, Timothy J. Norman, Frank Guerin, Simon Parsons:

Learning policies through argumentation-derived evidence. 1597-1598 - Paul Doran, Valentina Tamma, Terry R. Payne, Ignazio Palmisano:

Flexible agreement mechanism for dynamic meaning negotiation. 1599-1600 - Víctor Sánchez-Anguix, Soledad Valero, Vicente Julián, Vicente J. Botti, Ana García-Fornes:

Genetic-aided multi-issue bilateral bargaining for complex utility functions. 1601-1602 - Toshiharu Sugawara, Kensuke Fukuda, Toshio Hirotsu, Satoshi Kurihara:

Effect of probabilistic task allocation based on statistical analysis of bid values. 1603-1604 - Reyhan Aydogan, Pinar Yolum:

Effective negotiation with partial preference information. 1605-1606 - Bo An, Nicola Gatti, Victor R. Lesser:

Searching for pure strategy equilibria in bilateral bargaining with one-sided uncertainty. 1607-1608 - Jan Richter, Matthias Klusch, Ryszard Kowalczyk:

On monotonic mixed tactics and strategies for multi-issue negotiation. 1609-1610 - Miguel A. López-Carmona, Ivan Marsá-Maestre, Juan R. Velasco, Enrique de la Hoz:

A multi-issue negotiation framework for non-monotonic preference spaces. 1611-1612
Demos
- Jordi Campos Miralles, Maite López-Sánchez, Marc Esteva, Javier Morales:

A simulator for organisation-centred MAS adaptation in P2P sharing networks. 1615-1616 - Nick Hawes, Marc Hanheide, Kristoffer Sjöö, Alper Aydemir, Patric Jensfelt, Moritz Göbelbecker, Michael Brenner, Hendrik Zender, Pierre Lison, Ivana Kruijff-Korbayová, Geert-Jan M. Kruijff, Michael Zillich:

Dora the Explorer: a motivated robot. 1617-1618 - Angela Fabregues, David Navarro, Alejandro Serrano, Carles Sierra:

DipGame: a testbed for multiagent systems. 1619-1620 - Osman Ali, Bart Saint Germain, Jan Van Belle, Paul Valckenaers, Hendrik Van Brussel, Johan Van Noten:

Multi-agent coordination and control system for multi-vehicle agricultural operations. 1621-1622 - Emilia Garcia, Estefania Argente, Adriana Giret:

EMFGormas: a CASE tool for developing service-oriented open MAS. 1623-1624 - Emilia Garcia, Adriana Giret, Vicente J. Botti:

An evaluation tool for multiagent development techniques. 1625-1626 - Tomas Trescak, Marc Esteva, Inmaculada Rodríguez, Javier Morales:

Virtual world builder toolkit. 1627-1628 - Marc Cavazza, Raúl Santos de la Cámara, Markku Turunen:

How was your day?: a companion ECA. 1629-1630 - Elena del Val Noguera, Natalia Criado, Carlos Carrascosa, Vicente Julián, Miguel Rebollo, Estefania Argente, Vicente J. Botti:

THOMAS: a service-oriented framework for virtual organizations. 1631-1632 - Mariam Kiran, Paul Richmond, Mike Holcombe, Lee Shawn Chin, David Worth, Chris Greenough:

FLAME: simulating large populations of agents on parallel hardware architectures. 1633-1636 - Javier Vázquez-Salceda, Wamberto Weber Vasconcelos, Julian A. Padget, Frank Dignum, Siobhán Clarke, M. Palau Roig:

ALIVE: an agent-based framework for dynamic and robust service-oriented applications. 1637-1638 - Jelle Van Gompel, Bart Tuts, Rutger Claes, Mario Cruz:

MAS-DisCoSim 4 PDP: a testbed for multi-agent solutions to PDPs. 1639-1640 - Michal Jakob, Ondrej Vanek, Stepán Urban, Petr Benda, Michal Pechoucek:

AgentC: agent-based testbed for adversarial modeling and reasoning in the maritime domain. 1641-1642 - David Scerri, Ferdinand Gouw, Sarah L. Hickmott, Isaac Yehuda, Fabio Zambetta

, Lin Padgham:
Bushfire BLOCKS: a modular agent-based simulation. 1643-1644 - Jamie Snape, Stephen J. Guy, Jur P. van den Berg:

Independent navigation of multiple robots and virtual agents. 1645-1646 - Cameron Skinner, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn:

The RoboCup rescue simulation platform. 1647-1648 - Perukrishnen Vytelingum, Thomas Voice, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Alex Rogers, Nicholas R. Jennings:

Intelligent agents for the smart grid. 1649-1650
Doctoral mentoring program
- Shakil M. Khan

:
Rational agents: prioritized goals, goal dynamics, and agent programming languages with declarative goals. 1653-1654 - Minyi Li:

On efficient mediation approach to multi-issue negotiation with optimal and fair outcomes. 1655-1656 - Reid Kerr:

Coalition detection and identification. 1657-1658 - Stella Heras:

Strategic argumentation in open multi-agent societies. 1659-1660 - Sven Seuken:

Hidden market design. 1661-1662 - Scott Langevin:

Knowledge representation, communication, and update in probability-based multiagent systems. 1663-1664 - Viliam Lisý:

Adversarial planning for large multi-agent simulations. 1665-1666 - Prasanna Velagapudi:

Information sharing for distributed planning. 1667-1668 - Pooyan Fazli:

On multi-robot area coverage. 1669-1670 - Sofia Ceppi:

Designing sponsored search auctions for federated domain-specific search engines. 1671-1672 - Kennard R. Laviers:

Multi-agent plan adaptation using coordination patterns in team adversarial games. 1673-1674 - Taiki Todo:

Characterization of false-name-proof social choice mechanisms. 1675-1676
Industry track
- Koen Kok:

Multi-agent coordination in the electricity grid, from concept towards market introduction. 1681-1688 - Steffen Lamparter, Silvio Becher, Jan-Gregor Fischer:

An agent-based market platform for Smart Grids. 1689-1696 - Tetsuo Morita, Junji Yano, Kouji Kagawa:

Multiagent based interpolation system for traffic condition by estimation/learning. 1697-1704 - Cheng Wu, Kaushik R. Chowdhury, Marco Di Felice, Waleed Meleis:

Spectrum management of cognitive radio using multi-agent reinforcement learning. 1705-1712 - Andreas Breitenmoser, Fabien Tâche, Gilles Caprari, Roland Siegwart, Roland Moser:

MagneBike: toward multi climbing robots for power plant inspection. 1713-1720 - Ingrid Nunes, Ricardo Choren, Camila Nunes, Bruno Fábri, Fernando Silva, Gustavo R. de Carvalho, Carlos José Pereira de Lucena:

Supporting prenatal care in the public healthcare system in a newly industrialized country. 1723-1730 - Nathan Schurr, Paul Picciano, Janusz Marecki:

Function allocation for NextGen airspace via agents. 1731-1738 - Alexei Sharpanskykh, Sybert H. Stroeve:

Can we predict safety culture? 1739-1746 - Alan Carlin, Jeanine Ayers, Jeff Rousseau, Nathan Schurr:

Agent-based coordination of human-multirobot teams in complex environments. 1747-1754 - Touby Drew, Maria L. Gini:

MAITH: a meta-software agent for issue tracking help. 1755-1762
Additional demo contents
- Osher Yadgar:

Convoy protection by self-organized teams of UAVs. 1763-1764 - Jeff Orkin, Deb K. Roy:

Capturing and generating social behavior with the restaurant game. 1765-1766 - W. Bradley Knox, Peter Stone:

Training a Tetris agent via interactive shaping: a demonstration of the TAMER framework. 1767-1768 - Hongyuan Sun, John Thangarajah, Lin Padgham:

Eclipse-based Prometheus design tool. 1769-1770 - Rajiv T. Maheswaran, Craig Milo Rogers, Romeo Sanchez, Pedro A. Szekely:

Decision-support for real-time multi-agent coordination. 1771-1772

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














