[alife] CFP: Organisation, Cooperation and Emergence in Social Learning Agents (ECAL 2009)
Dara Curran
d.curran at cs.ucc.ie
Fri Jun 5 03:00:12 PDT 2009
*Apologies for cross posting. Please forward to those who may be interested*
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CALL FOR PAPERS
ORGANISATION, COOPERATION AND EMERGENCE IN SOCIAL LEARNING AGENTS
A EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICAL LIFE (ECAL 2009) WORKSHOP
BUDAPEST, HUNGARY, September 2009.
web: http://www.4c.ucc.ie/ECAL2009/
mail: d.curran at cs.ucc.ie
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INTRODUCTION
Social learning describes the process whereby an individual acquires
information from another in a non-genetic manner. There has been much
recent research on social learning in simulated agents spanning the
initial conditions favourable to their evolution, the evolution of
communication systems and some initial research on the impact of social
learning on the performance of coordinated agents. This research has
taken the form of robotic language games, agent-based simulations, game
theoretic approaches and experiments with embodied robotic agents.
However, there are many issues regarding the impact of social learning
which merit further exploration. In particular, the emergent effects of
social learning on societies in terms of organisation and cooperation
are still new areas of important research with great potential for
furthering our understanding of such effects in natural systems.
This workshop will provide a venue for the dissemination and discussion
of research spanning theoretical biology, multi-agent systems, game
theory and artificial life.
OBJECTIVES
The main aims of this workshop will be to:
* Attempt to understand how social learning can lead to the emergence of
organised behaviour. In essence, can the addition of social learning
to an evolutionary system lead to more complex organised societies capable
of solving problems more efficiently?
* Analyse how social behaviour can lead to cooperative behaviour and what
conditions are necessary for the spread and survival of socially transmitted
cooperative norms.
* Understand how various approaches can impact the success or failure of social
learning to acheive these goals.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Contributions invited addressing one or more of the following topics (the list is
not exhaustive) are invited:
* Social learning and coordination
* Social learning and cooperation
* Altruism and social learning
* Emergence of organisation and social structures
* Impact of social learning on evolutionary systems
* Communication and language
* The impact of topology
* Social hierarchies
* Kin selection
* Reputation and tags
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Dara Curran, University College Cork
Colm O'Riordan, National University of Ireland, Galway
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Michael Luck (King's College London, UK)
Laurent Keller, (University of Lausanne, Switzerland)
Dara Curran (University College Cork, Ireland)
Nathan Griffiths (University of Warwick, UK)
Federico Divila (Pablo de Olavide University Spain)
Angelo Cangelosi (University of Plymouth, UK)
Jason Noble (University of Southampton, UK)
Stefano Nolfi (Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies CNR, Italy)
Colm O’Riordan (NUI, Galway, Ireland)
Karl Tuyls (Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands)
Katja Verbeeck (University of Ghent, Belgium)
Daniel Kudenko (University of York, UK)
Paul Vogt (Tilburg University, Netherlands)
SUBMISSIONS
Papers have a maximum 8 page length.
Each submission will be subject to full peer review. A selection of the best papers
will be invited to submit to a special section of the Journal of Artificial Societies
and Social Simulation (http://jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk/).
Please format your paper using the Springer LNCS style.
Submissions should be sent to d.curran at cs.ucc.ie
IMPORTANT DATES
Submissions deadline: 30/06/2009
Notification of acceptance: 31/07/2009
Workshop begins: September (between the 12th and 17th)
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