Logic List Mailing Archive

AMPLE 2011: Agent-based Modeling for Policy Engineering

2 May 2011
Taipeh, Taiwan

AMPLE2011: 1st Workshop on Agent-based Modeling for Policy Engineering

http://ample2011.tudelft.nl/

Co-located with the 10th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and 
Multi-Agent Systems (AAMAS2011, http://www.aamas2011.tw/)

Aims

Socio-technical systems are complex adaptive entities that require the 
engagement of social and technical elements in an environment to reach certain 
goals. In order to understand, analyze or design such systems, advanced tools 
are required. One of the major tools for understanding socio-technical systems 
is agent-based modeling. In recent years, social scientists, including 
economists and policy makers, have been using agent-based models to tackle 
their problem domains. Building artificial societies by combining the 
multi-agent systems view and domain knowledge has become a challenge, because 
of the complexity involved.

Workshop Goals

The goal of AMPLE is to connect agent and artificial society research on the 
one hand, with policy making, institutional analysis and tools like system 
dynamics and gaming on the other. The combination could have benefits for the 
further enrichment of agentâ??based modeling and simulation. By gathering these 
different perspectives, we aim to explore how agent-research can be used or 
improved to assist with policy making in the social sciences.

TOPICS

Topics of particular interest for AMPLE include, but are not limited to:

Policy making: (tools and methods for) analysis, simulation, evaluation
Agent societies: design and simulation
Formal methods for specifying policies in coordination and organizational 
structures;
Models for verification, validation and visualization of simulations for policy 
making
Integration of normative and social aspects: formal aspects and practical 
issues
Agent-based models for decision making:
Social networks: influence in decision making; representation; models for 
simulation
Culture and social norms: influence in decision making; representation; models 
for simulation
Design for values in policy making
Comparison between System Dynamics and Agent-based modeling
Gaming: role in policy analysis; relation to simulation

Workshop Chairs
Francien Dechesne, Delft University of Technology, NL
Virginia Dignum, Delft University of Technology, NL
Amineh Ghorbani, Delft University of Technology, NL
Julian Padget, University of Bath, UK

Program Committee
Frances Brazier, TU Delft, NL
Rosaria Conte, IRC, Rome, IT
Nuno David, Univ. Lisbon, PT
Frank Dignum, Utrecht University, NL
Bruce Edmonds, Center for Policy Modeling, Manchester, UK
Armando Geller, George Mason University, USA
Maria Gini, University of Minnesota, USA
Gertjan Hofstede, Univ. Wageningen, NL
Jeroen van den Hoven TU Delft, NL
Catholijn Jonker, TU Delft, NL
Barry Silverman, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Liz Sonenberg, University of Melbourne, AUS
Yao-Hua Tan, TU Delft, NL
[To be completed...]

Important Dates:

Paper Submission ? 30 January 2011
Notification ? 27 February , 2011
Camera-ready submission ? 13 March, 2011
AMPLE WORKSHOP ? 2 or 3 May, 2011 (to be confirmed)

Instruction For Authors

Because the post-proceedings will be published in Springer LNCS, the 
preliminary proceedings will follow the corresponding format. The author 
instructions for both Word and LaTeX are available at the Springer website 
(here). The length of each paper including figures and references may not 
exceed 15 pages in this format. All papers must be written in English and 
submitted in PDF format. 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.

For submission of papers, please use easychair 
(https://www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?conf=ample2011)