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                | PANELS | 
               
               
                 
   
  
                   
                   
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                Agent Oriented Methodologies and Programming Languages: Towards   Practical Systems  
                   
                    Chair:  
                   
                  Keith Decker (University of Delaware, USA)  
                  Participants:  
                   
                  Klaus Fischer (DKKI, Germany) (bio) 
                   
                  Andrea Omicini (University of Bologna, Italy)   
                   
                  Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni (University Paris VI, France) (bio) 
                   
                Milind Tambe (University of Southern California, USA) (bio)  
                 
                 
                 
                Theoretical Foundations for Agents and MAS: Is Game Theory Sufficient?  
                 
                Chair:  
                 
                Jaime Sichman (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil)  
                Participants:  
                 
                Rosaria Conte (ISTC, Italy) (bio) 
                 
                Jacques Ferber (University of Montpellier, France) (bio)  
                 
                Wiebe van der Hoek (University of Liverpool, UK) (bio) 
                 
                Jeffrey Rosenschein (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel) (bio) 
                 
                 
                 
                 
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                Rosaria Conte 
                ISTC, Italy 
                 
                
                  
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                    Rosaria Conte is head of the LABSS (Laboratory of   Agent Based Social Simulation) at the ISTC (Institute   for Cognitive Science and Technology), and teaches Social Psychology at the   University of Siena. 
                        
                      She is a cognitive and social scientist, with a special   interest for the study of positive social action (altruism, cooperation and   social norms), and reputation-based social regulation. Quite active in the MAS field, she contributed to launch the field of social   simulation in Europe. She is coordinator of both European and Italian research   projects. She is President of the European Society of Social Simulation ( ESSA), coordinating   the section on Special Interest Groups, and of the Italian  Association of Cognitive Science.
                       
                      Rosaria   has published about 120 among scientific articles and books on cognitive social   agents, norms representation and reasoning, and agent-based simulation. Her   research interests range from Agent Theory to Multi Agent Systems, from   Agent-Based Social Simulation and Cultural Evolution to Info-societies and   Virtual Markets.  | 
                   
                 
                 
                 
                Klaus Fischer  
                DKKI, Germany 
                 
                
                
                  
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                    Klaus Fischer is research fellow, head of the Multiagent System Group and deputy head of the Agents and Simulated Reality Department at the German Reserach Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) GmbH. 
                           
                      After studying computer science at the Technische Universität (TU) in München he worked from 1986 to 1991 in the joint research project SFB 331 Information Processing in Autonomous Mobile Robot Systems at the Department of Computer Science at the TU München. In 1992 he finished his doctoral degree with his thesis on Distributed and Cooperative Planning in a Flexible Manufacturing System. 
                       
                      In January 1992 he joined the Multiagent System Research Group at DFKI GmbH in Saarbrücken in the department of Deduction and Multiagent Systems headed by Prof. H. J. Siekmann and assumed the responsibility of group leader in November 1993. Since then he lead numerous research
                      and industrial projects. Significant contributions were on applying multiagent systems in logistics and supply chain management. More recently his focus shifted towards model-driven development of
                      multiagent system. The EC funded projects ATHENA, COIN, and SHAPE formed the context of this work. 
                       
                      Klaus Fischer acted in the program committees of major conferences and workshops (e.g. AAMAS, HOLOMAS, CLIMA) and organized several workshops (more recently that ATOP workshop series) and has chaired major scientific events (e.g. EASSS 2000). He is member of the editorial board of international journals (e.g. JAAMAS, APIN) and has published some 80 articles in scientific conferences, workshops, and journals and published 4 books.
                     
                       
                    
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                Wiebe van der Hoek  
                University of Liverpool, UK 
                 
                
                
                  
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                    Prof van der Hoek is since 2002 a member of the Agent ART group at the   Computer Science Department at the University of Liverpool. His research   interests include Modal Logics for Knowledge and Cooperation. He   co-authored books on Dynamic Epistemic Logic and on Epistemic Logic, and   he is editor-in-chief of Knowledge, Rationality and Action. Before he   joined Liverpool, he was a member of the Intelligent Systems Group in   Utrecht, after he obtained his PhD at the Free University of Amsterdam.  
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                Andrea Omicini  
                University of Bologna, Italy 
                 
                
                  
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                    Andrea Omicini is Professor at the DEIS, Department of Electronics, Informatics and Systems of the Alma Mater Studiorum-Universita di Bologna, Italy. He received both his laurea degree in electronic engineering and his PhD in computer engineering from the Alma Mater.  
                      He has published over 200 articles on multiagent systems, coordination, software engineering, software infrastructures, and programming languages, and has edited 15 books and guest-edited 10 international journal special issues on agent-related issues. He has held several tutorials on agent-based systems and coordination models at international conferences and schools, and is currently serving as a member of the Advisory Board of the EASSS 2009 Summer School. He has organised and chaired international conferences and workshops: among his services, he worked as the Organising Co-Chair and Treasurer of the first AAMAS conference (Bologna 2002) the Program Chair of CIA 2003, ACM SAC 2004 & 2005, EUMAS 2006, and the co-founder of the DALT, ESAW and SELMAS workshop lines, as well as a member of the first Steering Committee of the COIN workshop series. He served as the Coordinator of the AgentLink III Technical Fora, worked 4 years as the Chair of the SIG on Agents and Multi-Agent Systems of the Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence (AI*IA), and is currenty the ACM Representative in the IFIP Technical Committee 12 "Artificial Intelligence".                      
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                Jeffrey Rosenschein  
                Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel 
                 
                
                  
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                    Jeff Rosenschein is a Professor of Computer Science at the Hebrew  University of Jerusalem, Israel, and director of its Multiagent Systems  Research Group. His research interests revolve around issues of  cooperation and competition among agents, and the use of economic  theory, voting theory, and game theory to establish appropriate  foundations for Multiagent Systems. Rosenschein received an AB in  Applied Mathematics from Harvard University (1979), and an MS (1982)  and PhD (1986) in Computer Science from Stanford University.  Prof.  Rosenschein co-authored the book, "Rules of Encounter: Designing  Conventions for Automated Negotiation among Computers", published by  MIT Press in 1994, which explored how automated agents can be designed  in ways that allow them to reach cooperative agreements, or cope with  inevitable conflicts.   | 
                   
                 
                 
                 
                Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni  
                University Paris VI, France 
                
                  
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                                               Amal El  Fallah Seghrouchni is Full Professor at the University Pierre and Marie Curie (Paris  6 - France).  She is researcher at LIP6 laboratory (University Pierre and Marie Curie and  CNRS - UMR7606) where she heads the Multi-Agent Systems team. She is also the  president of the French "College  SMA" which  federates more than 42 French teams working in the domain of intelligent agents  and Multi-Agent Systems. 
                           
                          Her main  research topics are "Analysis, Design and Validation of Multi-Agent Systems".  She published more than 100 papers in the major conferences of MAS field,  co-edited several books or post-proceedings and co-organised several  international events dedicated to Multi-Agent Systems (e.g. the series of  ProMAS workshops as a satellite event of AAMAS since 2003, LADS workshop as an  associated event with MALLOW 2007 and 2009, and Dagstuhl seminars). 
                           
                        Amal El  Fallah Seghrouchni is also involved in several international program committees  as AAMAS, ECAI, etc. Se has been vice co-chair of the international conference  IEEE/ACM WI-IAT (2005 and 2006  editions). As invited professor, she gave talks in international seminar and  courses for up-graduated students about multi-agent planning, coordination,  protocols of interaction, mobile computing, and programming multi-agent  systems, etc.  
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                Milind Tambe 
University of Southern California, USA 
 
                
                  
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                    Milind Tambe is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of  Southern California (USC). He received his Ph.D. from the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. He is a fellow of AAAI  (Association for Advancement of Artificial Intelligence), recipient of  the ACM/SIGART Agents Research award, and recipient of a special  commendation given by the Los Angeles World Airports (LAX) police from  the city of Los Angeles for design and deployment of the ARMOR Program  at LAX. Dr. Tambe is also recipient of the Okawa foundation faculty  research award, the RoboCup Scientific Challenge Award for oustanding research and the ACM recognition of service award. His papers have been  selected as best papers or finalists for best papers at 10 premier  agents conferences and workshops including AAMAS. Playing a  foundational role in the International Joint Conference on Agents and  Multiagent Systems (AAMAS), he has previously served on the board of  directors of the International Foundation for Agents and Multiagent  Systems (IFAAMAS) and related steering committees, as well as general  co-chair of AAMAS (2004).   | 
                   
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