@COMMENT This file was generated by bib2html.pl <http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pfr/misc_software/index.html#bib2html> version 0.90
@COMMENT written by Patrick Riley <http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~pfr>
@COMMENT This file came from Peter Stone's publication pages at
@COMMENT http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~pstone/papers
@book(AAMAS11-proceedings,
	title="Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems",
	editor="Kagan Tumer and Pinar Yolum and Liz Sonenberg and Peter Stone",
	publisher="International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (IFAAMAS)",month="May",year="2011",
	abstract={
                  The Autonomous Agents and MultiAgent Systems (AAMAS)
                  conference series brings together researchers from
                  around the world to share the latest advances in the
                  field. It provides a marquee, high-profile forum for
                  research in the theory and practice of autonomous
                  agents and multiagent systems. AAMAS 2002, the first
                  of the series, was held in Bologna, followed by
                  Melbourne (2003), New York (2004), Utrecht (2005),
                  Hakodate (2006), Honolulu (2007), Estoril (2008),
                  Budapest (2009) and Toronto (2010). You are now
                  about to enter the proceedings of AAMAS 2011, held
                  in Taipei, Taiwan, as AAMAS celebrates its 10th
                  anniversary as the successful merger of three
                  related events that had run for some years
                  previously. ifaamas logo
                  In addition to the general track for the AAMAS 2011
                  conference, submissions were invited to three
                  special tracks: a Robotics track, a Virtual Agents
                  track and an Innovative Applications track. The aims
                  of these special tracks were to give researchers
                  from these areas a strong focus, to provide a forum
                  for discussion and debate within the encompassing
                  structure of AAMAS, and to ensure that the impact of
                  both theoretical contributions and innovative
                  applications were recognized. Each track was chaired
                  by a leader in the field: Maria Gini for the
                  robotics track, James Lester for the virtual agents
                  track, and Peter McBurney for the innovative
                  applications track. The special track chairs
                  provided critical input to selection of Program
                  Committee (PC) and Senior Program Committee (SPC)
                  members, and to the reviewer allocation and the
                  review process itself. The final decisions
                  concerning acceptance of papers were taken by the
                  AAMAS 2011 Program Co-chairs in discussion with, and
                  in full agreement with the special track chairs.
                  Only full paper submissions were solicited for AAMAS
                  2011. The general, robotics, virtual agents, and
                  innovative applications tracks received 452, 31, 51,
                  and 41 submissions respectively, for a total of 575
                  submissions.
                  After a thorough and exciting review process, 126
                  papers were selected for publication as Full Papers
                  each of which was allocated 8 pages in the
                  proceedings and allocated 20 minutes in the Program
                  for oral presentation. Another 123 papers were
                  selected as Extended Abstracts and allocated 2 pages
                  each in the proceedings. Both Full Papers and
                  Extended Abstracts are presented as posters during
                  the conference.
                  Of the submissions, more than half (338) have a
                  student as first author, which indicates an exciting
                  future for the field. Representation under all
                  submissions of topics (measured by first keyword)
                  was broad, with top counts in areas such as
                  teamwork, coalition formation, and coordination
                  (31), distributed problem solving (30), game theory
                  (30), planning (26), multiagent learning (24), and
                  trust, reliability and reputation (17).
                  We thank the PC and SPC members of AAMAS 2011 for
                  their thoughtful reviews and extensive
                  discussions. We thank Maria Gini, James Lester and
                  Peter McBurney for making the Robotics, the Virtual
                  Agents and the Innovative Applications tracks a
                  success. We thank Michael Rovatsos for putting
                  together the proceedings. Finally, we thank David
                  Shield for his patience and support regarding
                  Confmaster during every stage between the submission
                  process and the actual AAMAS 2011 event. The Program
                  represents the intellectual motivation for
                  researchers to come together at the Conference, but
                  the success of the event is dependent on the many
                  other elements that make up week theespecially the
                  tutorials, workshops, and doctoral consortium. We
                  thank all members of the Conference Organising
                  Committee for their dedication, enthusiasm, and
                  attention to detail, and wish to particularly thank
                  Von-Wun Soo as Chair of the Local Organising
                  Committee for his contributions.
	},
        wwwnote={A book based on <a href="http://www.aamas2011.tw/">AAMAS 2011</a>
                 <br>
		 ISBN-10: 0-9826571-5-3  ISBN-13 978-0-9826571-5-7<br>
		 <a href="http://www.ifaamas.org/Proceedings/aamas2011/">on-line version from IFAAMAS</a>.},
)

