Call for Papers/Participation:

A Workshop on Agent-Based Manufacturing

to be held at Autonomous Agents '98
May 10, 1998
Minneapolis, MN

http://www.cs.umn.edu/~gini/sigman/agents98.html

It is increasingly evident that agent technologies will have some role in the manufacturing enterprise of the future. Software agents are inherently distributed systems, and so offer a convenient way of modeling processes that are distributed over space and time. Agents are also autonomous (at least to some degree), and so are good candidates for domains that require constant adaptation to changing environments or changing demands. A considerable body of recent work also addresses multi-agent systems, in particular the processes whereby multiple, communicating agents coordinate in the solution of a problem, the management of a system, etc. This combination of distributed, coordinated autonomy makes agent-based systems well-suited for a wide variety of applications in manufacturing domains.

The main purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers in manufacturing processes and applications with researchers in software agents to discuss how agent-based technology is used today and how it could be used in the near future for manufacturing problems. The workshop will provide a forum for reviewing the state of the art and for proposing new avenues of exploration, both from the point of view of agent theories and of manufacturing applications. The workshop will focus on specific advantages/disadvantages of agent-based architectures for manufacturing applications.

Areas of interest cover the full spectrum of agent-related topics applied to manufacturing problems, with particular emphasis on multi-agent applications. All aspects of manufacturing, from enterprise modeling to shop floor control, are of interest. This includes topics such as agile manufacturing, factory modeling, supply chain modeling, scheduling and control, shop floor operations, concurrent engineering, collaborative design, information infrastructure, etc.

Papers are solicited in the following areas:

Papers addressing these and related issues in the area of manufacturing will be considered. Work in progress, innovative ideas, field based studies, experimental results in real manufacturing environments, and completed projects will be of interest. Both practical and theoretical work is welcome, but preference will be given to descriptions of implemented systems.

Workshop format

The format of the workshop will be a combination of contributed and invited presentations, panels, and discussion among the participants. There will be a limited number of sessions, each focused on a specific topic selected among the ones listed above, each including a small group of papers, with time for brief presentations and ample opportunities for discussion.

How to participate

To participate please submit a paper on work in progress or a completed project (no more than 12 pages, 12 points, one-column format, including figures, tables, and bibliography) or an extended abstract or position paper (no more than 4 pages, one-column). For two-column papers or abstract, the page limits above should be roughly halved. Accepted papers and abstracts will be published in the workshop notes. Extended versions of the papers will be considered for publication in a forthcoming special issue of the journal Integrated Computer Aided Engineering. More details will be provided later.

Submission will be accepted either on paper (1 single-sided copy) or by e-mail (please make sure your electronic submission is a Unix-printable postscript file). Do not forget to include with your submission author's name(s), affiliation, complete mailing address, phone number, fax number and email address.

Send your submissions to Maria Gini, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, 4-192 EE/CSci Building, 200 Union St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. phone: (612) 625-5582; fax: (612) 625-0572; gini@cs.umn.edu

Submissions are due by January 15, 1998.
Notification of acceptance/rejection will be e-mailed by February 15.
Final copies of papers for the Workshop notes are due March 31.

Program Committee:

Suzanne Barber,
University of Texas at Austin, barber@cadlips.ece.utexas.edu
Mark Boddy (co-chair),
Honeywell Technology Center, boddy@htc. honeywell.com
Stefan Bussmann,
Daimler-Benz AG, bussmann@DBresearch-berlin.de
Maria Gini (co-chair),
University of Minnesota, gini@cs.umn.edu
Caroline Hayes,
University of Minnesota, hayes@cs.uiuc.edu
Van Parunak,
Industrial Technology Institute, van@iti.org
Steve Smith,
Robotics Institute, CMU, sfs@cs.cmu.edu
Richard Voyles
University of Minnesota, voyles@cs.umn.edu


Posted: 24 November 1997