Milind Tambe’s Talk has been moved to after coffee…
…on “Algorithmic Intervention Science: Towards AI decision aids for social work and public health” due to a misunderstanding concerning timing 🙂
(but not as bad as mine, since I accidently arrived for the workshop exactly 1 month early in June!)
The slides from the workshop…
…will be uploaded to https://cfpm.org/scs18-slides
After the workshop I will sort this out more and post the abstract, title, slides of each talk separately.
Looking forward to seeing everyone on the *14th* July
We will discuss post-workshop publication at the workshop.
Draft Schedule -v2
When | What | Who | Title |
8:00-8:30 | registration | ||
8:30-8:50 | Introduction | Frank Dignum | |
8:50-9:10 | Introduction | Bruce Edmonds | |
9:10-10:00 | Invited Talk | Milind Tambe | Algorithmic Intervention Science: Towards AI decision aids for social work and public health |
10:00-10:30 | coffee break | ||
10:30-11:10 | Paper | Tim Miller, Virginia Dignum and Frank Dignum | Planning for Human-Agent collaboration using Social Practices |
11:10-11:50 | Paper | Rijk Mercuur, John Bruntse Larsen and Virginia Dignum | Modelling the Social Practices of an Emergency Room to Ensure Staff and Patient Wellbeing |
11:50-12:30 | Paper | Antoni Perello-Moragues, Pablo Noriega, Julian Padget and Harko Verhagen | Value-driven policy-making as a socio-cognitive technical system |
12:30-14:10 | lunch break | ||
14:10-14:50 | Paper | Prashan Madumal, Tim Miller, Frank Vetere and Liz Sonenberg | Towards a Grounded Dialog Model for Explainable Artificial Intelligence |
14:50-15:30 | Paper | Stevan Tomic, Federico Pecora and Alessandro Saffiotti | What normative framework for mixed human-robot societies? |
15:30-16:00 | coffee break | ||
16:00-16:40 | Paper | Diogo Rato, Rui Prada and Samuel Mascarenha | Cognitive Social Frames: The role of Social Context in agents cognition |
16:40-17:30 | Discussion |
The invited speaker will be Milind Tambe
Founding Co-director, USC Center for AI in Society [CAIS] (cais.usc.edu),
Helen N. and Emmett H. Jones Professor in Engineering,
Professor, Computer Science & Industrial and Systems Engineering Departments,
University of Southern California,
and Co-Founder and Director of Research, Avata Intelligence (avata.ai)
Accepted papers
The following submitted papers have been accepted for the workshop:
- Prashan Madumal, Tim Miller, Frank Vetere and Liz Sonenberg. Towards a Grounded Dialog Model for Explainable Artificial Intelligence
- Tim Miller, Virginia Dignum and Frank Dignum. Planning for Human-Agent collaboration using Social Practices
- Rijk Mercuur, John Bruntse Larsen and Virginia Dignum. Modelling the Social Practices of an Emergency Room to Ensure Staff and Patient Wellbeing
- Antoni Perello-Moragues, Pablo Noriega, Julian Padget and Harko Verhagen. Value-driven policy-making as a socio-cognitive technical system
- Stevan Tomic, Federico Pecora and Alessandro Saffiotti. Position paper: What normative framework for mixed human-robot societies?
- Diogo Rato, Rui Prada and Samuel Mascarenhas. Cognitive Social Frames: The role of Social Context in agents cognition
In addition there will be an introduction to the topic by the organisers, an invited speaker and a discussion session.
The workshop will be a full day on 14th July
In room “T3”
The Conference Venue is Stockholmsmässan, Mässvägen 1, 125 80 Älvsjö
First International workshop on Socio-Cognitive Systems (SCS18@FAIM2018 )
About
Much of AI only makes sense within the social systems they are embedded. In the real world, these social systems in their turn are created and maintained by the people and thus their cognitive abilities. Thus cognitive and social processes are highly interdependent – studying one in the absence of the other will mean that significant aspects are missed. In this workshop we want to explore the interactions between cognitive and social aspects of “socio-cognitive systems” – that is where the social and cognitive aspects are studied together. The workshop connects elements of IJCAI/ECAI, AAMAS and ICML. Of course, modelling these systems in terms of Multi-Agent Systems seems intuitive, but also would require special attention to the social concepts in these MAS. The cognitive abilities of the agents should adapt themselves to the social context and development, which connects this area to machine learning in a social context. The topic of the workshop also connects to many general AI themes as appearing at IJCAI/ECAI.
The main attraction of this workshop is that the topics are all taken together in the context of socio-cognitive systems and not seen as separate topics to be studied in isolation. Instead of focusing on one side or other of this “coin”, SCS will look at theories and systems that strive to integrate the social and the cognitive into a single framework. The social reality in which SCS operate is very complex and moreover not static, but constantly changing based on human interactions. By understanding cognitive systems in their social setting and social systems in the light of their cognitive foundations, the SCS workshop looks for new understanding of both the cognitive and the social.
Dates:
- Deadline for submissions: 1st May 2018
- Notification of acceptance:Â May/June 2018
- Camera-ready copy of papers: June 2018
- Workshop:Â 14 or 15 July 2018
The Topic
Much of AI only makes sense within the social systems they are embedded. In the real world these social systems in their turn are created and maintained by the people and thus their cognitive abilities.
In this workshop, we want to explore the interactions between cognitive and social aspects of so-called socio-cognitive systems. The workshop connects elements of IJCAI/ECAI, AAMAS and ICML. Of course, modelling these systems in terms of Multi-Agent Systems seems intuitive, but would require special attention to the social concepts in these MAS. The cognitive abilities of the agents should adapt themselves to the social context and development, which connects this area to machine learning in a social context.
The topics of the workshop include but are not limited to:
- Social norms, conventions and practices
- Institutions
- Social networks and their dynamics
- Group recognition and membership
- Development of (social) Identity
- Status and power relations
- Plan coordination
- Social agency
- Social adaptation
- Social self-regulation
- The construction of social reality
- Complex negotiations
- Agreed naming and reference
- Cultural coherence
- Foundations of Communication
- The construction and coordination of complex value-chains
- Enculturation
- Co-development of social context
SCS welcomes high-quality research that goes beyond looking at social aspects of individual cognition or the properties of individuals in social systems and seeks to truly integrate these two layers. We particularly welcome interdisciplinary research, work that seeks to tackle areas that have been ignored before and novel approaches to relating the cognitive and the social. We are agnostic about the kind of approach or tools used, but favour approaches with an identifiable empirical or computational/formal content – both systems constructed for a particular goal in mind and models of observed or theoretical systems. However, the aim is to give new insights – into social science, cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence – merely formalising or implementing a system is not enough. We welcome contributions from a wide range of standpoints as long as this does not involve an effective reduction to only the individual or social levels.
Papers will undergo the normal review process and are selected on the basis of quality. However, when choices have to be made we will try to spread the accepted papers over the main themes of the workshop. Interesting ideas are more important in this respect than detailed results on fringe topics.
Post-Workshop Publication
A selection of the best papers of the workshop will be considered for a special issue of the new Springer journal: Socio-Cognitive Systems.
Formatting guidelines:
We encourage participants to submit a paper (15 pages max), describing their work on one or more of the topics mentioned above. All non-presenting participants will need to submit a one-page position statement which presents their view on socio-cognitive systems relative to (one of) the workshop topics.
All submissions must include the author’s name(s), affiliation, complete mailing address, phone number, fax number and email address. Please use the LNCS format for formatting your paper.
All accepted submissions and position statements will be published in the workshop proceedings.
Submission procedure:
Submissions should be submitted through the EasyChair system in PDF format to:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scs18
The deadline for receipt of submissions is 1st May 2018. Papers received after this date will not be reviewed.
Program Committee (Provisional):
- Cristiano Castelfranchi
- Amit Chopra
- Stephen Cranefield
- Gert-Jan Hofstede
- Wander Jager
- Catholijn Jonker
- Yoshi Kashima
- Victor Lesser
- Emiliano Lorini
- John-Jules Meyer
- Pablo Noriega
- Jeremy Pitt
- Rui Prada
- Javier Vazquez Salceda
- Munindar Singh
- Liz Sonenberg
- Wamberto Vasconcelos
- Harko Verhagen
Format of Workshop
The workshop will partly follow a traditional format with presented papers. However, we will strive to have group discussions about the papers as well. Part of the day will be devoted to discussing ways to get interdisciplinary collaborations going in this area and finding new research opportunities and applications that combine several aspects of socio-cognitive systems.
Workshop Organizers
Frank Dignum
http://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~dignu101/
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=1JLu0o4AAAAJ
Bio: Dr. Frank Dignum is working on social aspects of software agents with applications in serious gaming and social simulations. He is well known for his work on norms and agent communication and lately for the combination of agents and games and Agent Based Social Simulations. He has organized many (>10) workshops (ACL, AMEC, COIN, AGS,…) and conferences (AAMAS, ECAI) on the topics and given tutorials at most major conferences and summer schools on them.
Bruce Edmonds
Google Scholar: http://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=uYuZ1VEAAAAJ
Bio: Bruce Edmonds is Professor of Social Simulation and Director of the Centre for Policy Modelling at the Manchester Metropolitan University. His reseach focusses on all aspects of agent-based social simulation, having organised many workshops and edicted many special issues on a variety of related topics.