[Apologies for cross and multiple postings] 
 
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CALL FOR PAPERS
The 26th International Conference on Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent 
Systems (PRIMA 2025) 
 
Conference: 15th - 21st December 2025 
Modena, Italy 
 
Conference website: https://conferences-website.github.io/prima2025 
 
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IMPORTANT DATES 
 
Abstract Submission Deadline: 15 July (AoE, UTC-12)  
Paper Submission Deadline: 22 July (AoE, UTC-12) 
Paper Notification: 29 September 2025 (AoE, UTC-12)  
Camera Ready Submission: 13 October 2025 (AoE, UTC-12) 
 
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We invite you to submit your best work on agents and multi-agent systems to 
PRIMA 2025, the 26th International Conference on Principles and Practice of 
Multi-Agent Systems, to be held in Modena (Italy) in December 2025. 
 
Papers will be submitted through CMT at the link: 
https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/PRIMA2025/Submission/Index 

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Awards
To recognize outstanding contributions, PRIMA 2025 will have the following 
awards:

Aditya Ghose Best Paper Award – €1000 prize
Awarded to the best overall paper based on reviewers' scores and program 
committee discussions.
Martin Purvis Student Best Paper Award – €500 prize
Awarded to the best paper where the lead author is a student, based on the same 
evaluation criteria.

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Scope and Background 
 
Software systems are rapidly becoming more intelligent in the functionality 
they offer to users. They are also becoming more decentralized, with components 
that act autonomously and must communicate among themselves or with human users 
to achieve their goals. Examples of such systems include those in healthcare, 
disaster management, e-business, and smart grids. A multi-agent perspective is 
crucial to the proper conceptualization, deployment, and governance of these 
systems. Rooted in solid computational and software engineering foundations, 
this perspective offers abstractions such as intelligent agents, protocols, 
norms, organizations, trust and incentives, among others. As a large, but still 
growing research field of artificial intelligence, multi-agent systems today 
remain a unique enabler of interdisciplinary research. 
 
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Areas of Interest
 
The conference areas of interest include, but are not limited to: 
 
Logic and Reasoning 
Logics of Agency 
Logics of Multi-Agent Systems 
Logics of Belief and Knowledge 
Norms, Obligations, Deontic Logic 
Argumentation 
Logics and Game Theory 
Uncertainty in Agent Systems 
 
Agent and Multi-Agent Learning 
Reinforcement Learning 
Evolutionary approaches 
Machine Learning Problems in Multi-Agent Systems 
Agents Embodied with Large Language Models 
 
Engineering Multi-Agent Systems 
Agent-Oriented Software Engineering 
Interaction Protocols 
Formal Specification and Verification 
Agent Programming Languages 
Middleware and Platforms 
Testing, Debugging, and Evolution 
Deployed System Case Studies 
 
Agent-Based Modeling and Simulation 
Simulation Languages and Platforms 
Artificial Societies 
Virtual Environments 
Emergent Behavior 
Modeling System Dynamics 
Application Case Studies 
 
Collaboration & Coordination 
Multi-Agent Planning 
Distributed Problem Solving and Optimization 
Teamwork 
Coalition Formation 
Negotiation 
Trust and Reputation 
Commitments 
Institutions and Organizations 
Normative Systems 
 
Algorithmic Game Theory 
Auctions and Mechanism Design 
Bargaining and Negotiation 
Behavioral Game Theory 
Cooperative Games: Theory, Analysis, Computation 
Game Theory for Practical Applications 
Noncooperative Games: Theory, Analysis, Computation 
 
Computational Social Choice 
Voting 
Fair Division and Resource Allocation 
Matching under Preferences 
Coalition Formation Games 
Aggregation of Beliefs, Opinions, Judgments 
Ethics and Computational Social Choice 
Participatory Budgeting 
Facility Location 
Communication Issues in Social Choice, Distortion 
Behavioral Social Choice 
 
Human-Agent Interaction 
Adaptive Personal Assistants 
Embodied Conversational Agents 
Virtual Characters 
Multimodal User Interfaces 
Mobile Agents 
Human-Robot Interaction 
Affective Computing 
 
Decentralized Paradigms 
Cloud Computing 
Service-Oriented Computing 
Data spaces 
Big data 
Cybersecurity 
Robotics and Multirobot Systems 
Ubiquitous Computing 
Social Computing 
Internet of Things 
Edge Computing 
Blockchain 
 
Ethics and Social Issues 
Explainable Artificial Intelligence 
Ethics of AI Systems 
Multi-Agent Systems for Social Good 
 
Application Domains for Multi-Agent Systems 
Healthcare, Pandemics Management 
Autonomous Systems 
Transport and Logistics 
Emergency and Disaster Management 
Energy and Utilities Management 
Sustainability and Resource Management 
Games and Entertainment 
e-Business, e-Government, and e-Learning 
Smart Cities 
Financial markets 
Legal applications 
Crowdsourcing 
 
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Information for Authors 
 
PRIMA 2025 invites submissions of original, unpublished work strongly relevant 
to multi-agent systems. Apart from theoretical work, we encourage the 
submission of reports on the development of applications or prototypes of 
deployed agent systems, and of experiments that demonstrate novel agent system 
capabilities. In addition to this, we also encourage the submission of position 
papers that are of relevance to the multi-agent community. 
 
All submitted papers must be in a form suitable for double-blind review. 
Specifically, in order to make blind reviewing possible, authors must omit 
their names and affiliations from the paper. Also, while the references should 
include all published literature relevant to the paper, including previous work 
of the authors, it should not include unpublished works. When referring to 
one's own work, use the third person rather than the first person. For example, 
say "Previously, Foo and Bar [2] have shown that…", rather than "In our 
previous work [2], we have shown that…". Such identifying information can be 
added back to the final camera-ready version of accepted papers. 
 
All papers will be reviewed by at least 2-3 experts in the area following a 
detailed review form that will assess the paper based on the significance and 
novelty of the idea, the technical description of the proposal, clarity and 
organization, the evaluation methodology, and any ethical considerations. 
 
All accepted papers will be published in Springer's Lecture Notes in Artificial 
Intelligence series (LNCS/LNAI). 
 
All papers must be submitted using the Springer LNCS/LNAI format. 
 
Type of submissions: 
Full papers, 16 pages plus references 
Short papers, 4 pages plus references 
Position papers, 2 pages plus references 
 

Kind regards,

General Chairs:
Angelo Ferrando, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (Italy)
Vadim Malvone, Télécom Paris (France)

Program Chairs:
Federico Bergenti, University of Parma (Italy)
Catalin Dima, Université Paris-Est Créteil (France)
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