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Fifth International Bi-Conference Workshop on
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AGENT-ORIENTED INFORMATION SYSTEMS
(AOIS-2003)
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14 or 15 July 2003, Melbourne, Australia,
at AAMAS'03
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This bi-conference workshop aims to bring
together researchers and practitioners from the Information Systems and
Agents communities who will be shaping the future of information systems
engineering.
Important Dates
Topics of Interest
Workshop Format Special Track Submission Organising Committee
Important dates:
- Abstract submissions
March 30, 2003
- Paper submissions
March 31, 2003 Extended to
April 16, 2003
- Notification
May 6, 2003
- Position paper
sub May 16, 2003
- Camera-ready
papers May 16, 2003
Workshop Description and
motivations
Agent-Orientation is emerging as a powerful new paradigm in computing.
Concepts and techniques from the agents paradigm could well be the foundations
for the next generation of mainstream information systems
Information systems have become
the backbone of all kinds of organizations today. In almost every sector
-- manufacturing, education, health care, government, and businesses large
and small-- information systems are relied upon for everyday work, communication,
information gathering, and decision-making. Yet the inflexibilities in current
technologies and methods have also resulted in poor performance, incompatibilities,
and obstacles to change. As many organizations are reinventing themselves
to meet the challenges of global competition and e-commerce, there is increasing
pressure to develop and deploy new technologies that are flexible, robust,
and responsive to rapid and unexpected change.
Agent concepts hold great promise for responding to the new realities
of information systems. They offer higher level abstractions and mechanisms
which address issues such as knowledge representation and reasoning, communication,
coordination, cooperation among heterogeneous and autonomous parties, perception,
commitments, goals, beliefs, intentions, etc. all of which need conceptual
modelling. On the one hand, the concrete implementation of these concepts
can lead to advanced functionalities, e.g., in inference-based query answering,
transaction control, adaptive workflows, brokering and integration of disparate
information sources, and automated communication processes. On the other
hand, their rich representational capabilities allow more faithful and flexible
treatments of complex organizational processes, leading to more effective
requirements analysis, and architectural/detailed design. The workshop will
focus on how agent concepts and techniques will contribute to meeting information
systems needs today and tomorrow.
The workshop encourages submissions on all topics related to AOIS, including
(but not limited to) the following:
- agent-oriented modeling
and design methods
- models and architectures
for agent-oriented information systems
- novel information system
technologies based on software agents
- agent-oriented requirements
engineering
- agents and knowledge
management
- agent-oriented approaches
to data integration
- agent-based workflow
modeling
- agent orientation and
e-services/web services
- agent orientation in
web information systems
- agent-oriented enterprise
and business process modeling
- agent communication
languages for business communication
- ontologies and agents
- managing trust and reputation
- automated business-to-business
interaction (including negotiation and contracting)
Workshop Format
To foster greater communication and interaction between the Information
Systems and Agents communities, we are organizing the workshop as a bi-conference
event. It is intended to be a single "logical" event with two "physical"
venues. It is hoped that this arrangement will encourage greater participation
from, and more exchange between, both communities. The first part of the
Workshop Description and motivationsi-conference event in 2003 will be held
in July at AAMAS 2003, and the second in October at the 22nd International
Conference on Conceptual Modeling (ER03 - http://www.er.byu.edu/er2003/).
The event at the ER03 conference will be co-chaired by Brian Henderson-Sellers
(Faculty of Information Technology, University of of Technology, Sydney,
Australia) and in order to make stronger the connection with the IS
modeling community we plan to have at AAMAS invited speakers that are more
from the IS side.
The technical program will include invited talks, contributed
papers, and poster sessions. Authors of accepted papers who present
their
paper at one location will also be invited to present their papers as
a poster in the other location.
Publication of selected papers from the workshop in a special issue
of a journal is being planned.
Special Track: (at AOIS@
AAMAS2003)
Agent-Oriented Methodologies -- Commonalities and Distinctions
The growth of interest in software agents and multi-agent systems has
recently led to the development of new methodologies based on agent concepts.
Methodologies and associated
notations (such as, Gaia,
AAII, AOR, MaSE, Message/UML, AUML, OPEN/Agent, Tropos, PASSI and Prometheus
among others) have become the focal point of attention in the emerging
area of agent-oriented software engineering. These methodologies
propose different approaches in using agent concepts and techniques
at various stages during the software development lifecycle.
To promote deeper understanding among and to foster synergy across research
efforts in the various methodologies, this special track solicits research
contributions that will identify, analyze, and illustrate the commonalities
and distinctions across different methodologies. Methodologies may
differ in their objectives and underlying premises, the way they deal with
issues such as openness, uncertainty, security, and autonomy, the extent
of coverage over the different phases of software engineering, the way they
stress the evolution, maintenance, and other non-functional qualities, and
eventually with respect to the tools and technologies that can support them.
Methodologies may also differ in generality, some focusing on specialized
application domains, or specific implementation technologies. A clarification
of the similarities and differences among methodologies is needed to guide
the practitioner in choosing which methodology to adopt for what applications
and circumstances. A clearer understanding of the strengths and weaknesses
of various methodologies, their compatibilities and divergences, will also
be crucial for further advancements in the development and potential convergence
of methodologies.
Submitted papers must have agent orientation as a central feature. They
could include (but are not limited to) papers that:
- contain a detailed exposition
of one methodology using a case study and explaining what stages the methodology
covers, possibly with direct comparisons to at least one other methodology;
- focus on selected technical
issues (e.g., evolution and maintenance, coordination and protocols, validation
and verification), analyzing how one or more methodologies deal with those
issues, using a case study as much as possible to illustrate;
- analyze and illustrate
how selected agent concepts (e.g., roles responsibilities, capabilities,
intentionality, autonomy, dependency networks and trust) are used
in different methodologies, and the consequences of those different approaches;
- describe the decisions
and commitments supported by one methodology in the development process,
possibly showing what kinds of analyses are used to support these decisions;
- compare a methodology
to other agent-based methodologies as well as other non-agent-based methodologies
(for instance, object-oriented, component-based, etc.);
- present from practical
experience the methodological difficulties and challenges a
methodology may face, possibly proposing requirements and evolution criteria
for evaluating methodologies from practical prospective.
Submission of Papers
To submit a regular paper as a postscript or pdf file, authors should
either send it by email (or place it on a web server and send its
URL) to paolo.giorgini@dit.unitn.it.
A separate message with the title, author names, affiliations, contact
information and an abstract has to be sent. Papers must be at most 15 pages.
Submitted papers must be formatted using the Springer LNCS style. Templates
(llncs.cls, llncs.sty, or sv-lncs.dot) are available at: http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html.
Papers for the special track (Agent-Oriented Methodologies -- Commonalities
and Distinctions) should be clearly identified.
Position Papers
In addition to full length, refereed papers, we are also seeking position
papers. These can be submitted by email to pgiorgini@science.unitn.it
in ps or
pdf format.
Your position paper should not exceed 2 pages. It must either
1. discuss a specific problem, or
2. attack a specific position, or
3. articulate a specific technology forecast.
You must indicate under which of these three categories your position
paper falls. A problem discussion must begin with a section called Problem
Statement and must conclude with a section called Research Questions. An
attack must first describe the position to be attacked in neutral language
before it presents reasons why it should be rejected. A technology forecast
should consist of one or more forecast statements with additional explanation.
Please have a look at our list of research questions at http://www.aois.org/CfPP.html
Organization commitee
Co-chairs:
Paolo Giorgini
Department of Information and Communication Technology
University of Trento, Italy
Email: paolo.giorgini@dit.unitn.it
Web page: http://www.dit.unitn.it/~pgiorgio
Michael Winikoff
School of Computer Science and Information Technology
RMIT University
Email: winikoff@cs.rmit.edu.au
Web page: http://www.cs.rmit.edu.au/~winikoff
Steering Committee:
Yves Lesperance
Department of Computer Science
York University, Canada
Email:lesperan@cs.yorku.ca
Web page: http://www.cs.yorku.ca/~lesperan
Gerd Wagner
Department of Information & Technology,
Eindhonven University of Technology, The Netherlands
Email: G.Wagner@tm.tue.nl
Web page: http://tmitwww.tm.tue.nl/staff/gwagner
Eric Yu
Faculty of information Studies,
University of Toronto, Canada
Email: eric.yu@utoronto.ca
Web page: http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~eric
Program Committee:
- B. Blake (Georgetown University Washington,
DC)
- P. Bresciani (ITC-
irst, Italy)
- H.-D. Burkhard
(Humboldt Univ., DE)
- L. Cernuzzi (Univ.
Católica Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, Paraguay)
- L. Cysneiros (York
University, Toronto)
- F. Dignum (Univ.
of Utrecht, NL)
- B. Espinasse (Domaine
Universitaire de Saint-Jérôme, France)
- I.A. Ferguson
(B2B Machines, USA)
- T. Finin
(UMBC, USA)
- A. Gal (Technion
- Israel Institute of Technology)
- U. Garimella (Andra
Pradesh Govt., MSIT, India)
- A.K. Ghose (Univ.
of Wollongong, AU)
- B. Henderson-Sellers
(University of Technology, Sydney,AU)
- G. Karakoulas
(CIBC and Univ. Toronto, CA)
- K. Karlapalem
(Indian Inst. of Information Technology, India)
- L. Kendall (Monash
University, Australia)
- D. Kinny (University
of Melbourne)
- S. Kirn (Techn.
Univ. Ilmenau, DE)
- M. Kolp (Université
catholique de Louvain, Belgium)
- N. Jennings (Southampton
University, UK)
- G. Lakemeyer (RWTH
Aachen, DE)
- Y. Lespérance
(York University, CANADA)
- D.E. O'Leary (Univ.
of Southern California, USA)
- F. Lin (Hong Kong
Univ. of Science and Technology, HK)
- J.P. Mueller (Siemens,
DE)
- J. Odell (James
Odell Associates, USA)
- O. F. Rana (Cardiff
University, UK)
- M. Schroeder (City
Univ. London, UK)
- N. Szirbik
(Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, The Netherlands)
- F. Zambonelli
(University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy)
- C. Woo (Univ.
British Columbia, CA)
- Y. Ye (IBM T.J.
Watson Research Center,NY)
- B. Yu (North Carolina
State University, USA)
This web page at http://www.AOIS.org was
last updated on 30-Jan-2003.