1 / 11

4th International Workshop on Multi-Agent Based Simulation in Melbourne

Join us at the 4th International Workshop on Multi-Agent Based Simulation in Melbourne on July 14th. Learn about the overlap between MAS and ABSS and the benefits they offer to each other. Explore various MABS techniques and discuss their applications in real-world modeling. Don't miss the invited talk by Giovana Di Marzo Serugendo on engineering emergent behavior.

maryannea
Download Presentation

4th International Workshop on Multi-Agent Based Simulation in Melbourne

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to @aamas03, Melbourne, 14th July The 4th International Workshop on MULTI AGENT BASED SIMULATION

  2. Introduction David HalesCentre for Policy Modelling, Manchester Metropolitan University.See http://cfpm.org and http://www.davidhales.com • Short MABS FAQ – what’s it all about? • Brief history of MABS • Quick overview of the schedule today with revised times The MABS Organising committee are: David Hales, Juliette Rouchier, Emma Norling, Bruce Edmonds, Roberto Pedone

  3. MABS FAQ Q. Is MABS all about multi-agent systems engineering (MAS)? A.No! Q. Is MABS all about agent-based social simulation (ABSS)? A.No! Q. So what’s it about? A.MABS is about both MAS and ABSS – specifically it’s about the overlap (where MAS informs ABSS and where ABSS informs MAS).

  4. MABS FAQ Q. Why would MAS benefit from ABSS? A.Because human and other naturally occurring societies appear to self-organise in a decentralised and fault tolerant way solving complex coordination problems (think of a city like Melbourne). Q. Why would ABSS benefit from MAS? A.Because in order to understand naturally occurring societies and how they work we need to simulate them – the only currently available technology that can handle this complexity is MAS.

  5. MABS FAQ – a tale of two cultures Computer Science controversy MAS emergence qualitative, descriptive theory engineering techniques statistical analysis MABS applications empirical observation understand the world make things work formal theory conceptual modelling deductive proofs rich concepts of agency constructive ABSS limited concepts of agency Social Science consensus

  6. A Brief History of MABS • The first MABS workshop held in Paris at ICMAS 1998 – chaired by Nigel Gilbert (Surrey, UK). • The second MABS workshop held in Boston at ICMAS 2000 – chaired by Scott Moss (Manchester, UK). • The third MABS workshop held in Bologna at AAMAS 2002 – chaired by Jaime Sichman (Sao Paulo, Brazil). • All interesting and productive – all proceedings published and available from Springer (see http://cfpm.org/mabs2003 for more details)

  7. Schedule Overview 1.MABS Techniques for MAS Starting next.. invited talk + 3 papers, chair: David Hales. 2.Economics, Exchange and Influence in Virtual Worlds Starting 11:30am, 4 papers, chair: Juliette Rouicher. 3.MABS Techniques for Real World Modelling Starting 2:30pm, 3 papers, chair: Emma Norling. 4.General Discussion (time permitting!) Starting at 4:30pm, “A killer application for MABS?” (everyone should think of big questions and general observations and raise them here) Breaks: Coffee (10-10:30am & 3-3:30pm), Lunch 1:30-2:30pm.

  8. Revised Times - Morning Session 1: Next.. Invited talk – Giovana Di Marzo Serugendo 9:30am Paper – Foster McGeary et al. 10:00am to 10:30am coffee break 10:30am Paper – Keiki Takadama et al. 11:00am Paper – Fabien Michel et al.

  9. Revised Times - Morning Session 2: 11:30am Paper – Maria Ribeiro Rodrigues et al. 12:00am Paper – Shinji Tomita et al. 12:30am Paper – Inchiro Takahashi et al. 1:00pm Paper – Ricardo Soa et al. 1:30pm to 2:30pm lunch break (at the latest) In the unlikely event that we finish this session early then we may go to lunch earlier and come back earlier = more time for discussion session at the end of the day.

  10. Revised Times - Afternoon Session 3: 2:30pm paper - Nicolas Becu et al. 3:00pm to 3:30pm coffee break 3:30pm paper - Juliette Rouchier et al. 4:00pm paper - Noda Itsuki et al. 4:30pm Discussion 5pm(ish) finish Evening… perhaps we can coordinate for dinner (if enough interested) will make announcement before we finish.

  11. Invited TalkEngineering Emergent Behaviour : A VisionGiovana Di Marzo Serugendo • Background in mathematics and computer science. • Previously worked on mobile agent-based distributed systems and formal specifications using Petri-nets. • Worked for European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), specification and simulation of data-acquisition systems. • Currently based in Geneva University she leads a project on Engineering Self-Organising Applications (ESOA). • Chairs ESOA workgroup of AgentCities.NET project. • Is chairing the ESOA Workshop (W16) tomorrow! • Also involved in using human-like notions of trust to produce self-configuring security mechanisms.

More Related