Call for Papers and Participation

First International Workshop on
Social Life (SOLI'03)

Workshop date: 14 September, 2003

held in conjunction with ECAL 2003,
the 7th European Conference on ARTIFICIAL Life,
14. - 17. September 2003, Dortmund, Germany.

organised by
Chair of AI and Applied Computer Science, University of Würzburg,
AI Lab of the Department of Computer Sciences, Humboldt University Berlin, and
"Theoretical Foundations of Computer Science" Group, University of Hamburg
Organizing Board   Programme Committee   Submissions
Deadline for submissions: June 2, 2003 
Notification of acceptance: Juli 1, 2003
Deadline for final papers: August 1, 2003
Workshop: September 14, 2003

Postscript   pdf

Certain phenomena recognized and observed in the domain of Artificial Life correspond to and recur on specific concepts in the mind of an observer. In the context of multi agent systems, social concepts become increasingly important. In the process of constructing agents and multi agent systems, computer scientists tend to apply their own, relatively restricted and everyday-knowledge-based set of social concepts. Problems occuring in the process of construction can be traced down to technical and/or conceptual causes.
The application of social concepts to all kinds of computational systems, especially in the domain of Artificial Life, can profit from an active and lifely cooperation with disciplines like Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, Law, Economics and the Cognitive Sciences. Artificial Life has a main focus on interaction and sociality on different layers of observation, let it be on population scale or in proteine interaction. Intensive research lead to advanced theories that try to explain emergent cooperation, evolution of stable social pattern, or even the evolution of communication. This highly interdisciplinary research may give interesting incentives to the more technology-based Multi Agent System area. Also Multi Agent Systems can be seen as an interdisciplinary research area with roots not only in computer science but also in Sociology, Economics and the Cognitive Sciences. Thus there is a large intersection between Artificial Life and Multi Agent Systems, especially when dealing with social concepts.

The workshop will take place just before the 7th European Conference on ARTIFICIAL Life, 14.-17. September 2003, Dortmund, Germany
The Workshop date will be 14. September 2003.
 


Submissions

Innovative and original papers in English language are welcome for submission. The papers will be reviewed by at least two programme committee members. Selection criteria will focus on relevance to the special topic, originality with respect to the state of the art, and potential for discussion.

The program committee invites submissions of contributions as: long versions (10 - 20 pages) and short versions (up to 5 pages). Submissions should be either in POSTSCRIPT or PDF format and emailed to soli03@informatik.uni-hamburg.de .

Accepted papers will be included in the workshop proceedings which will appear either as a technical report of the Department of Computer Science, University of Hamburg or as a workshop binder provided by the ECAL organizers. The proceedings will be available at the workshop. The best contributions will be considered for further publication.
 
 

For further information about SOLI'03 contact the programme committee by email at soli03@informatik.uni-hamburg.de
or have a look at the 
SOLI'03 homepage at http://www2.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/tgi/events/soli03/

Range of Interest

Most interesting in view of the concerns of the workshop is, that multi agent systems are now seen as an excellent vehicle in terms of metaphors, concepts, and tools to support the research issues mentioned below. Ways and means to approach all these challenges can be theoretical, experimental, empirical, prototypical, applied, etc. We expect to have many different perspectives which will lead to an interesting and lively discussion during and after the workshop as we experienced it with other interdisciplinary workshops.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:




Programme committee
Petra Ahrweiler University of Hamburg, Germany ahrweiler@sozwi.sozialwiss.uni-hamburg.de
Rosaria Conte National Research Council,Rome, Italy conte@ip.rm.cnr.it
Kerstin Dautenhahn University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom K.Dautenhahn@herts.ac.uk
Bruce Edmonds Manchester Metropolitan University Business School, United Kingdom b.edmonds@mmu.ac.uk
Catholijn Jonker Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands jonker@cs.vu.nl
Gabriela Lindemann (co-Chair) Humboldt University Berlin,Germany lindeman@informatik.hu-berlin.de
Franziska Klügl (co-Chair) University of Würzburg, Germany kluegl@informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de
Daniel Moldt (co-Chair) University of Hamburg, Germany moldt@informatik.uni-hamburg.de
Michael Schillo DFKI Multiagent Systems Group, Germany schillo@dfki.de
Ingo Timm TZI Bremen, Germany i.timm@tzi.org
Adelinde Uhrmacher University Rostock, Germany lin@informatik.uni-rostock.de
Thomas Uthmann University Mainz, Germany uthmann@informatik.uni-mainz.de

 



 
Organizing Board
Gabriela Lindemann Humboldt University Berlin,Germany lindeman@informatik.hu-berlin.de
Franziska Klügl University of Würzburg, Germany kluegl@informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de
Daniel Moldt University of Hamburg, Germany moldt@informatik.uni-hamburg.de

 


Last modified: 29.04.2003 Daniel Moldt

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