Research Training Site GLoRiClass
Research Training Site GLoRiClass: Call for Participation / First Announcement

Call for Participation / First Announcement

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION & FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT
2nd Workshop on Logic and the Simulation of Interaction and Reasoning (LSIR-2)
held at IJCAI-09, Pasadena CA, U.S.A., July 2009

Description of workshop and Topics. In the past years, logicians have become more and more interested in the phenomenon of interaction and the formal modelling of social procedures and phenomena. The area Logic & Games deals with the transition from the static logical paradigm of formal proof and derivation to the dynamic world of intelligent interaction and its logical models. Modelling intelligent interaction has been an aspect of the practical work of computer game designers for a long time. Pragmatic questions such as 'What makes a storyline interesting', 'What makes an reaction natural', and 'What role do emotions play in game decisions' have been tackled by practicing programmers. The practical aspects of computer gaming reach out to a wide interdisciplinary field including psychology and cognitive science. So far, there are only a few cross-links between these two communities.

LSIR2 focuses on the relation between techniques of modern logic (such as discourse representation theory or dynamic epistemic logic) and concrete modelling problems in computer games (either as part of the story or game design or as part of the design of the artificial agents). We aim combining communities of logic, multi-agent systems, computer game design, the story understanding community, and various parts of AI dealing with the formal modelling of emotions and intentions, as well as the empirical testing of these models; we invite all researchers in these and related field to submit their abstracts of papers, in particular those that build bridges between the communities.

Format of workshop. The workshop will have four invited keynote speakers, covering the various communities of interest for our topic. In addition to that, we will issue a Call for Papers and ask for submissions. These submissions will be reviewed by the programme committee, and the best eight to ten submissions will be selected for 30-minute presentations. In case we get a large number of high-quality submissions, we will host a poster session as well, accepting up to ten posters.

Attendance. In addition to the 12-14 speakers, we expect further participants who will engage in the discussions. We estimate that the workshop will have between 30 and 50 participants.

Submission requirements. We invite all researchers in the relevant fields to submit extended abstracts of one to four pages of text via the EasyChair submission page at http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=lsir2. The first Call for Papers will be issued in December 2008.

Workshop Chair. Benedikt Löwe, Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC), Universiteit van Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergracht 24, 1018 TV Amsterdam, The Netherlands; bloewe (at) science (dot) uva (dot) nl.

LSIR-2 Programme Committee.
Jan Broersen (Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Cristiano Castelfranchi (Rome, Italy)
Frank Dignum (Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Benedikt Löwe (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Erik T. Mueller (Hawthorne NY, United States of America)
Amitabha Mukherjee (Kanpur, India)
Mark Overmars (Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Eric Pacuit (Stanford CA, United States of America)
Rohit Parikh (New York NY, United States of America)
Jos Uiterwijk (Maastricht, The Netherlands)
Hans van Ditmarsch (Otago, New Zealand & Aberdeen, Scotland)

Workshop URL. http://projects.illc.uva.nl/GLoRiClass/index.php?page=8_2

The main financial sponsor of the workshop is the Marie Curie research training site GLoRiClass.