đ„ Paper submission deadline extended to February 20, 2022 (Closed)
Call for Papers
COINE 2022 is co-located with the International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS), Auckland, New Zealand, 9-13 May, 2022 https://aamas2022-conference.auckland.ac.nz/
Overview
The pervasiveness of âopen systemsâ raises a range of challenges and opportunities for technologies in the area of autonomous agents and multi-agent systems. However, achieving and maintaining a âgoodâ society is difficult to achieve as the participating entities (including human users), their modes of interaction or the intended purpose of the system may change over time. Moreover, in the case of open multi-agent systems, the autonomy of the agents can work against the effectiveness of the society. As a further trajectory of influence, coordination techniques such as distributed ledger technology can increase the autonomy and complexity of these open systems as a whole and challenge their governance. There is therefore a need for tools and techniques for articulating interactions in order to make the system more effective in attaining collective goals, more certain for participants or more predictable.
Coordination, organizations, institutions, norms and ethics are five key governance elements for the regulation of open multi-agent systems. This workshop is an evolution of the COIN (Coordination, Organizations, Institutions and Norms in Agent Systems) workshop series that ran at various conferences including AAMAS (12 times), IJCAI, AAAI and ECAI since 2006 (see Workshop Series Website), and produced 13 volumes of post-proceedings in Springerâs Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence.
Continuing this tradition, the goal of the COINE workshop is to bring together researchers in autonomous agents and multi-agent systems working on the scientific and technological aspects of social coordination, organizational theory, normative MAS, artificial or electronic institutions, norm-aware and ethical agents.
We invite submissions that address any of the following aspects:
- mathematical, logical, computational, philosophical and pragmatic issues related to COINE;
- modelling, animation and simulation techniques for open MAS;
- tools, prototypes and working systems;
- experimental investigation of the effectiveness of COINE technologies;
- challenging or innovative ideas relevant to the field;
- methodologies for the development of trustworthy AI; and
- trustworthy AI education within the scope of MAS.
The workshop complements the main AAMAS program by allowing a more relaxed and in-depth discussion of MAS from a social perspective and has proven to be an event that encourages debate, and fosters collaboration among researchers in these topics.
A specific emphasis of this yearâs iteration of COINE lies on the response to growing interest in the concept of norms applied to social and human-centric AI, so we will also aim to establish better mutual awareness between COINE and that community by making explicit references in our scope for research in development methodologies and education of trustworthy AI.
To leverage a broader understanding on how COINE-related themes are employed in these research disciplines, we will invite established researchers from the respective fields in order to highlight their perspectives on and adoption of COINE theory and technologies. Building on those insights, we will use this workshop to provide a platform to discuss the potentially varying viewpoints and facilitate the exploration of synergies as well as collaborative opportunities across community boundaries.
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Important Dates (Updated)
- Paper submission (Closed):
January 30, 2022February 13, 2022February 20, 2022 - Author notifications:
February 27, 2022March 28, 2022 - Camera-ready deadline:
March 4, 2022April 7, 2022 - Workshop: Workshop: May 10, 2022, 05:00â09:30 UTC+12 (Auckland time)
Instructions for Authors
For preparation of papers please follow the instructions for authors available at the Springer LNCS Web page.
We solicit three types of papers in the LNCS format:
- Full research papers (16 pages)
- Short research papers (10 pages) â These âearly-innovationâ papers are work-in-progress papers and these will be reviewed with an emphasis on novelty/originality of the idea.
- Blue sky ideas (up to 16 pages) â These papers have the same scope of the blue sky ideas track of AAMAS 2022 (see https://aamas2022-conference.auckland.ac.nz/calls/call-for-blue-sky-ideas/), focussing on the COINE topics
The page lengths mentioned above include figures and references. All papers must be written in English and submitted in PDF format. Information about the paper type should be included at the end of the title of the paper â (Full), (Short) or (Blue Sky ideas).
For submission of papers, please use the EasyChair site at: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=coine2022
Submitted papers will be reviewed on a âsingle-blindâ basis by at least two reviewers.
Submission of a paper should be regarded as an undertaking that, should the paper be accepted, at least one of the authors will attend the workshop to present the work.
Proceedings
Preliminary proceedings will be available before the conference. They will also be distributed to AAMAS 2022 registrants in electronic form.
As with previous COIN(E) workshops, COINE intends to publish post-proceedings in Springerâs LNCS series (pending confirmation). Authors will be invited to submit revised and extended versions of their paper for consideration in these post-proceedings.
Revised papers must take into account the discussion held during the workshop; hence, only papers that are presented during the workshop will be considered for inclusion in the post-proceedings volume.
COINE 2022 Co-Chairs
- Nirav Ajmeri (University of Bristol, UK)
- Andreasa Morris-Martin (University of Bath, UK)
- Tony Savarimuthu (University of Otago, NZ)