---------------------------------------------------------------------- Like previous edition, the post-proceedings is planned to be published as a: Springer LNAI volume ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Paper submission deadline: NEW 20 February 2015 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 3rd International Workshop on Engineering Multi-Agent Systems (EMAS 2015) 4 and/or 5 May 2015 Istanbul, Turkey (held in conjunction with AAMAS 2015) URL: http://www.di.unito.it/~baldoni/EMAS2015/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CALL FOR PAPERS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The engineering of multi-agent systems (MAS) is a complex activity. These systems consist of multiple autonomous and heterogeneous agen- ts, and the system's proper behavior depends on the effective interac- tion of these agents. MAS have been used to a certain extent in indu- stry to realize self-* solutions, but a wider adoption is hindered by the fact that the engineering techniques for building these systems are not as mature as main-stream software engineering techniques. Nu- merous challenges have to be addressed: * Design abstractions; how to effectively design agents and their interactions? * Self-* capabilities; how to conceive and deliver self-* capabilities within new or existing solutions? * Implementation solutions; how to effectively implement multi-agent coordination or organizations? * Verification techniques; how to formally verify (un)desired proper- ties of individual agents and MAS? These challenges can be tackled more effectively when considered toge- ther within the overarching discipline of MAS engineering. For exam- ple, design artifacts (e.g., agent or MAS models) can be used to sup- port and assist with debugging and testing. Another example is the de- velopment of agent-oriented programming languages that result in pro- grams that are more readily verifiable. A final example is the use of declarative techniques for the design and implementation of self-* sy- stems. The International Workshop on Engineering Multi-Agent Systems (EMAS) is the ideal venue for papers that relate to all aspects of agents and MAS engineering. EMAS was created in 2013 as a merger of three separa- te workshops (with overlapping communities) that focus on software en- gineering aspects (AOSE), programming aspects (ProMAS), and applicati- on of declarative techniques to design, programming and verification (DALT). The EMAS community welcomes papers that describe lessons lear- ned and engineering challenges and solutions identified in building and deploying multi-agent systems. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- TOPICS OF INTEREST ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The EMAS workshop aims to: 1- Progress and further develop the understanding of how to engineer multi-agent systems. 2- Bring together the communities that are concerned with the differe- nt aspects of engineering multi-agent systems, and by doing so, al- low for a better interchange of ideas among communities, thus ex- ploiting new and consolidated synergies. 3- Attract papers that report on experiences and lessons learned from innovative applications of MAS. 4- Provide a "natural fit" for papers that describe innovative ideas, solutions, and applications. 5- Investigate the use of MAS for the conception, implementation, and deployment of self-* systems. We thus call for papers that are concerned with any aspect of the engi- neering of multi-agent systems. The list of topics includes but is not limited to: * Programming frameworks, languages, models and abstractions for MAS ** cognitive notions such as beliefs, goals, plans ** social, organizational, and normative aspects ** agent coordination ** agent communication, trust, commitments, and reputation ** contracts, negotiation policies ** mobile agents * Formal methods and declarative technologies for specification, verification and engineering of MAS ** semantics of multi-agent programming languages ** modal and epistemic logics for agent modeling ** game theory for multi-agent systems ** semantics of agent communication ** logic programming-based approaches for agent systems ** distributed constraint satisfaction ** declarative approaches to engineering agent-based systems ** high-level executable multi-agent specification languages ** algorithms for multi-agent programming (e.g., coordination, cooperation, negotiation) * MAS software engineering methodologies and techniques, and development concerns ** software architectures for multi-agent systems ** qualities and tradeoffs of agent-based architectures ** goal-oriented design ** reusable design knowledge: patterns and reference architectures ** modeling languages for agents and MAS ** testing of agent-based software ** fault tolerance and load balancing for mobile MAS ** safety and security for mobile MAS deployment ** autonomy vs. dependability and robustness ** security and trust in multi-agent systems * Interoperability and integration ** interoperability and standards for MAS ** standardization efforts for multi-agent systems ** integration of multi-agent and mainstream technologies ** integration of agents with legacy systems ** middleware integration of agent-based software ** implications of agent-based solutions on system development * Tools and testbeds ** benchmarks and testbeds for comparing multi-agent programming languages and tools ** CASE tools for agent-oriented software development ** agent/environment/interaction/organization development tools and platforms ** generic tools and infrastructures for multi-agent programming ** coordination infrastructures for multi-agent systems * Using MAS techniques for ** engineering self-* systems ** autonomic solutions ** systems of systems ** (semantic) service-oriented architectures ** multi-agent based simulation ** social engineering ** concurrent and distributed systems ** grid computing ** pervasive computing ** mobile/distributed applications * Empirical studies and (industrial) experience reports on engineering MAS applications for ** e-health ** e-commerce ** e-learning ** socio-technical systems ** social networks ** (human-)robot systems ** big data ** crowd-based applications ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- We welcome and encourage the submission of high-quality, original papers, which are not being submitted simultaneously for publication elsewhere. Papers should be written in English, formatted according to the Springer LNCS style, and not exceed 16 pages. Paper submission is electronic via the conference website. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- WORKSHOP PROCEEDINGS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Pre-proceedings with all accepted papers are provided electronically on a USB stick as part of the AAMAS workshop registration package. As- suming a sufficient number of high-quality submissions, we will also consider the publication of formal post-proceedings with an internati- onal publisher. The post-proceedings of EMAS 2013 (LNAI 8245), EMAS 2014 (LNAI 8758) have been published by Springer-Verlag in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence series. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT DATES ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Paper submission deadline: 20 February 2015 Notification of acceptance/rejection: 10 March 2015 Camera-ready copies due: 19 March 2015 Workshop Date: 4 and/or 5 May 2015 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Matteo Baldoni (University of Torino, Italy) * Luciano Baresi (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) * Mehdi Dastani (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)