SR 2016Posted in

4th International Workshop on Strategic Reasoning

Event Dates

Jul 09, 2016 - Jul 10, 2016

Location

New York

Submission Deadline

Apr 18, 2016

4th International Workshop on Strategic Reasoning (SR2016)

To be held as Satellite Workshop of LICS 2016

9-10 July 2016, New York City, USA.

https://sites.google.com/site/sr2016homepage/home

Introduction

Strategic reasoning is a key topic in the multi-agent systems research

area. The literature in this field is extensive and includes a variety

of logics used for reasoning about the strategic abilities of the agents

in the system. Results stemming from this research have been used in a

wide range of applications, including robotic teams endowed with

adaptive strategies, and automatic players capable of beating expert

human adversaries. A common feature in all these domains is the

requirement for sound theoretical foundations and tools accounting for

the strategies that agents may adopt in the presence of adversaries.

The SR international workshop series aims to bring together researchers

working on different aspects of strategic reasoning in computer science,

both from a theoretical and a practical point of view.

Topics of interest

The topics covered by the workshop include, but are not limited to, the

following:

Logics for reasoning about strategic abilities;

Logics for multi-agent mechanism design, verification, and synthesis;

Logical foundations of decision theory for multi-agent systems;

Strategic reasoning in formal verification;

Automata theory for strategy synthesis;

Applications and tools for cooperative and adversarial reasoning;

Robust planning and optimization in multi-agent systems;

Risk and uncertainty in multi-agent systems;

Quantitative aspects in strategic reasoning.

Previous Editions

SR 2013 (satellite event of ETAPS 2013). 16-17 March 2013, Rome.

SR 2014 (satellite event of ETAPS 2014). 5-6 April 2014, Grenoble.

SR 2015. 21-22 September 2015. Oxford.

(All information from previous events are accessible from

http://www.strategicreasoning.net/)

Submissions

Submitted contributions should not exceed 10 pages using the EPTCS

format. If necessary, submitted papers can be supplemented with a

clearly marked appendix, which will be consulted at the discretion of

the program committee. Submitted papers should be formatted in PDF and

uploaded to

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sr2016

Two types of submission will be considered:

articles reporting on novel research;

expository papers reporting on published work.

Each submission should be clearly identified as belonging to one

category or the other.

Novel research abstracts will be held to the usual high standards of

novel research publications. In particular, they will be expected to

contain enough information to enable the program committee to identify

the main contribution of the work, explain the significance of the work,

its novelty, and its practical or theoretical implications, and include

comparisons with and references to relevant literature.

Expository abstracts, which will be held to similarly high standards,

may survey an area or report on a more specific previously published

work. Submissions should make clear the relevance to the strategic

reasoning audience.

Authors of the contributions accepted for presentation (in both

categories) will be invited to publish their work as part of an EPTCS

volume to be published around the time of the workshop.

Submissions from PC members is allowed.

Important Dates

18 April 2016: Abstract submission deadline.

18 April 2016: Submission deadline (AoE).

5 May 2016: Acceptance notification.

18 May 2016: Camera-ready version deadline.

9-10 July 2016: SR 2016.

Proceedings

A volume in the EPTCS will be published as in previous years. Authors of

contributions presented at the workshop and previously unpublished will

be given an opportunity for the paper to be included. Inclusion in EPTCS

volume is not mandatory.

As in the past, extended and revised versions of the contributions

judged to be particularly significant will be published in a special

issue of the International Journal of Information and Computation.

General Chair

Moshe Y. Vardi, Rice University

Program Chair

Alessio Lomuscio, Imperial College London

Program Committee

Natasha Alechina, University of Nottingham

Francesco Belardinelli, Imperial College London

Patricia Bouyer-Decitre, LSV – CNRS & ENS Cachan

Nils Bulling, Delft University of Technology

Krishnendu Chatterjee, IST Austria

Catalin Dima, University of Paris-Est-Creteil

Giuseppe De Giacomo, Universita’ di Roma La Sapienza

Wiebe van der Hoek, University of Liverpool

Julian Gutierrez, University of Oxford

Orna Kupferman, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Wojtek Jamroga, Polish Academy of Sciences

François Laroussinie, Université Paris Diderot

Christof Löding, RWTH Aachen

Emiliano Lorini, Université Paul Sabatier

Jakub Michaliszyn, Univ of Wroclaw

Aniello Murano, Universita’ di Napoli

Wojciech Penczek, Polish Academy of Sciences

Sophie Pinchinat, University of Rennes

Nir Piterman, University of Leicester

Jean-Francois Raskin, Université Libre de Bruxelles

Francesca Rossi, Università di Padova

Sasha Rubin, Universita’ di Napoli

Toby Walsh, University of New South Wales

Michael Wooldridge, University of Oxford