First International Workshop on Artificial Intelligence
for Smart Grids and Smart Buildings
February 12 or 13, 2016
Phoenix, Arizona
Co-Located with AAAI-2016
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
The proliferation of intelligent devices and the availability of electric
monitoring facilities, broadband communication networks, computational
intelligence, and customer-driven electricity storage and generation
capabilities, have posed the foundations for the next generation power grids
and buildings: smart grids and smart buildings.
AI plays a key role in smart grids and in smart buildings; the infrastructure
provides information to support automated decision making on how to
autonomously adapt production and consumption of energy, optimize costs, waste,
and environmental impact, and ensure safe, secure, and efficient operation. The
goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers from diverse areas of AI
to explore both established and novel applications of AI techniques to address
the design, implementation, and deployment of smart grids and smart buildings.
TOPICS
• Multi-agent systems in smart grids and smart buildings
• Optimization methods for smart grids and smart buildings
• Machine learning mechanisms for smart grids and smart buildings
• Knowledge-based methods in design of smart grids and smart buildings
• Coordination of intelligent agents in smart grids and smarNot buildings
• Human-computer interactions within smart grids and smart buildings
• Negotiation and trading strategies in energy markets
• Simulations of energy markets, smart grids, and smart buildings
WORKSHOP FORMAT
The workshop will include three components: an invited keynote speaker; a
collection of presentations selected from peer-reviewed submissions; and a
closing panel to discuss future directions of research in this field.
SUBMISSIONS
Participants should submit a paper (maximum 6 pages + 1 page of references),
describing their work on one or more of the topics relevant to the workshop,
using the AAAI style files. Accepted papers will be presented during the
workshop and will be published as AAAI technical reports, which will be made
freely available in AAAI's digital library.
All submissions are conducted via EasyChair:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aisgsb2016. Submissions should
include the name(s), affiliations, and email addresses of all authors.
IMPORTANT DATES
* October 23rd: Submission Deadline
* November 23rd: Acceptance Notification
* December 7th: Camera-Ready Deadline
* February 12th or 13th: Workshop
ORGANIZATION
Enrico Pontelli (Chair), New Mexico State University, [email protected]
Alex Rogers, University of Southampton, [email protected]
Sylvie Thiebaux, Australian National University and NICTA,
[email protected]
Son Cao Tran, New Mexico State University, [email protected]
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Mario Berges, Carnegie Mellon University (USA)
Archie Chapman, University of Sydney (Australia)
Mathijs de Weerdt, Delft University of Technology (The Netherlands)
Alessandro Farinelli, University of Verona (Italy)
Maria Fox, King’s College London (UK)
Chris Kiekintveld, University of Texas El Paso (USA)
Akshat Kumar, Singapore Management University (Singapore)
Amnon Meisels, Ben-Gurion University (Israel)
Chiara Piacentini, King’s College (UK)
Sarvapali Ramchurn, University of Southampton (UK)
Paul Scott, Australian National University and NICTA (Australia)
Sven Seuken, University of Zurich (Switzerland)
Pradeep Varakantham, Singapore Management University (Singapore)
Meritxell Vinyals Salgado, CEA (France)
William Yeoh, New Mexico State University (USA)
CONTACT
E-mail: [email protected]
URL: www.cs.nmsu.edu/aisgsb16
_______________________________________________
logic-programming mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.picat-lang.org/mailman/listinfo/logic-programming
_______________________________________________
Om-announce mailing list
[email protected]
http://openmath.org/mailman/listinfo/om-announce