[Call for Contributions] Special Issue on Multi-Agent Systems Research in the United Kingdom

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Stefano V. Albrecht

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Dec 13, 2021, 8:28:57 AM12/13/21
to rl-...@googlegroups.com, Michael Wooldridge
If your research group has significant activity in Multi-Agent Systems research and is based in the United Kingdom (UK), please consider submitting to below special issue which is organised by the Alan Turing Institute.
-- 
Dr. Stefano V. Albrecht
Assistant Professor, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
Head of Autonomous Agents Research Group (https://agents.inf.ed.ac.uk)
Royal Society Industry Fellow, Five AI (https://www.five.ai)
Twitter: @UoE_Agents


-------- Forwarded Message --------
[This e-mail was sent to the mailing list of the Multi-Agent Systems special interest group at the Alan Turing Institute (sign-up form).]


Special Issue: Multi-Agent Systems Research in the United Kingdom
In: AI Communications, The European Journal of Artificial Intelligence
https://www.aicommunications.eu/aims-and-scope


Multi-agent systems are a core area of research of modern artificial intelligence. A multi-agent system consists of multiple decision-making agents - such as software-based systems, physically-embodied robots, and humans - which interact in a shared environment to achieve certain goals. Multi-agent systems (MAS) research spans a range of technical problems, such as how to design planning and learning algorithms which enable agents to achieve specified goals in MAS; how to design MAS to incentivise certain behaviours in agents; how information is communicated and propagated among agents; and how norms, conventions and roles may emerge in MAS. A vast array of applications can be addressed using multi-agent methodologies, including autonomous driving, multi-robot factories, automated trading, commercial games, automated tutoring, and robotic rescue teams.

The purpose of this special issue, to be published in AI Communications, is to showcase current multi-agent systems research led by university and industry groups which are based in the United Kingdom (UK). We invite all research groups or institutes in the UK that have significant activity in multi-agent systems research to submit an article describing: (1) the technical problems in multi-agent systems tackled by the group (research agenda), including applications and industry collaboration; (2) the main approaches developed by the group and any key results achieved; and (3) a description of important open challenges in multi-agent systems research as viewed or prioritised by the group. There is no fixed article structure as long as the above questions are addressed in sufficient detail.

This special issue is being organised as part of the work of the Alan Turing Institute, the UK's national centre for AI & Data Science.


Eligibility:

Your research group should be located in the UK and have significant activity in multi-agent systems research, e.g., as evidenced by a sustained publication track record in multi-agent systems research in leading conferences/journals. We define ‘group’ broadly, to include groups led by a single PI and institutes, which involve multiple PIs working in multi-agent systems research. Groups may be located at universities or at companies with significant research activity.


Submission and format:

Articles should be formatted using the AI Communications LaTeX style (https://www.aicommunications.eu/guidelines). The article title should reflect the research focus of the group. There are no strict page limits, but we suggest no more than 10 pages. Articles can be submitted to the special issue via the submission portal at https://www.editorialmanager.com/aic. At the "Select Article Type" step, please select "Special Issue: Multi-agent Systems" from the drop down menu. Again at the "Section/Category" step please also select "Special Issue on Multi-agent Systems" from the drop down menu.


Deadline and review process:

Submissions must be received no later than 30 April 2022. Each submission will be screened by the editors for eligibility, formatting, and whether questions (1-3) above are covered. Accepted articles will be published together in a dedicated issue of the journal, and made available online. Authors may also upload their preprint to a repository such as arXiv.


For any questions regarding the special issue or eligibility, please contact the special issue editors.


Editors:

Stefano V. Albrecht
University of Edinburgh
https://agents.inf.ed.ac.uk/stefano-albrecht

Michael Wooldridge
University of Oxford
https://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/michael.wooldridge


The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. Is e buidheann carthannais a th’ ann an Oilthigh Dhùn Èideann, clàraichte an Alba, àireamh clàraidh SC005336.

Stefano V. Albrecht

unread,
Feb 7, 2022, 12:05:27 PM2/7/22
to rl-...@googlegroups.com
If your research group has significant activity in Multi-Agent Systems research and is based in the United Kingdom (UK), please consider submitting to below special issue which is organised by the Alan Turing Institute.
-- 
Dr. Stefano V. Albrecht
Assistant Professor, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
Head of Autonomous Agents Research Group (https://agents.inf.ed.ac.uk)
Royal Society Industry Fellow, Five AI (https://www.five.ai)
Twitter: @UoE_Agents


-------- Forwarded Message --------
[This e-mail was sent to the mailing list of the Multi-Agent Systems special interest group at the Alan Turing Institute (sign-up form).]


Special Issue: Multi-Agent Systems Research in the United Kingdom
In: AI Communications, The European Journal of Artificial Intelligence
https://www.aicommunications.eu/aims-and-scope


Multi-agent systems are a core area of research of modern artificial intelligence. A multi-agent system consists of multiple decision-making agents - such as software-based systems, physically-embodied robots, and humans - which interact in a shared environment to achieve certain goals. Multi-agent systems (MAS) research spans a range of technical problems, such as how to design planning and learning algorithms which enable agents to achieve specified goals in MAS; how to design MAS to incentivise certain behaviours in agents; how information is communicated and propagated among agents; and how norms, conventions and roles may emerge in MAS. A vast array of applications can be addressed using multi-agent methodologies, including autonomous driving, multi-robot factories, automated trading, commercial games, automated tutoring, and robotic rescue teams.

The purpose of this special issue, to be published in the AI Communications journal, is to showcase current multi-agent systems research led by university and industry groups which are based in the United Kingdom (UK). We invite all research groups or institutes in the UK that have significant activity in multi-agent systems research to submit an article describing: (1) the technical problems in multi-agent systems tackled by the group (research agenda), including applications and industry collaboration; (2) the main approaches developed by the group and any key results achieved; and (3) a description of important open challenges in multi-agent systems research as viewed or prioritised by the group. There is no fixed article structure as long as the above questions are addressed in sufficient detail.


This special issue is being organised as part of the work of the Alan Turing Institute, the UK's national centre for AI & Data Science.


Eligibility:

Your research group should be located in the UK and have significant activity in multi-agent systems research, e.g., as evidenced by a sustained publication track record in multi-agent systems research in leading conferences/journals. We define ‘group’ broadly, to include groups led by a single PI and institutes, which involve multiple PIs working in multi-agent systems research. Groups may be located at universities or at companies with significant research activity.


Submission and format:

Articles should be formatted using the AI Communications LaTeX style (https://www.aicommunications.eu/guidelines). The article title should reflect the research focus of the group. There are no strict page limits, but we suggest no more than 10 pages. Articles can be submitted to the special issue via the submission portal at https://www.editorialmanager.com/aic. At the "Select Article Type" step, please select "Special Issue: Multi-agent Systems" from the drop down menu. Again at the "Section/Category" step please also select "Special Issue on Multi-agent Systems" from the drop down menu.


Deadline and review process:

Submissions must be received no later than 30 April 2022. Each submission will be screened by the editors for eligibility, formatting, and whether questions (1-3) above are covered. Accepted articles will be published together in a dedicated issue of the journal, and made available online. Authors may also upload their preprint to a repository such as arXiv.


For any questions regarding the special issue or eligibility, please contact the special issue editors.


Editors:

Stefano V. Albrecht
University of Edinburgh
https://agents.inf.ed.ac.uk/stefano-albrecht

Michael Wooldridge
University of Oxford
https://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/michael.wooldridge


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