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Introduction to the Special Issue

AI Magazine

The research addressed in the autonomous agents field covers a wide spectrum of levels from the cognitive to the organizational, exploits diverse mechanisms and approaches, and has had a major impact on many aspects of artificial intelligence research. In 2011 the Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS) conference series celebrated its 10th anniversary, having begun as the successful merger of three related events that had run for some years previously. The 2011 AAMAS conference received 575 submissions, and 126 papers were selected for publication as full papers. 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). The tag cloud (figure 1), generated from the titles of the full papers at the conference, conveys a sense of the relative prominence of topics.


Ten Years of AAMAS: Introduction to the Special Issue

Sonenberg, Liz (University of Melbourne) | Stone, Peter (University of Texas at Austin) | Tumer, Kagan (Oregon State University) | Yolum, Pinar (Bogazici University)

AI Magazine

In 2011 the Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS) conference series celebrated its 10th anniversary, having begun as the successful merger of three related events that had run for some years previously.