*CALL FOR PAPERS* 

We are happy to invite you to participate in 

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Business Agents and the Semantic Web (BASeWEB'04) 

May 16, 2004 - London, Ontario, Canada 

A workshop held in conjunction with 
The Seventeenth Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence 

http://www.cs.unb.ca/baseweb/baseweb04/CFP-2004.htm 
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Theme 

E-business increasingly uses Web Services or agents acting on behalf of
human buyers and sellers. Such Business Agents can profit from the
machine-interpretable product and service descriptions provided by the
Semantic Web. Cross-fertilized techniques from AI (e.g., Intelligent Agents)
and the Internet (e.g., the Semantic Web) are thus explored by numerous
organizations world-wide, including W3C, OASIS, DARPA, NRC, IST, and INTAP.
Web ontologies - consisting of taxonomies and/or rules - constitute the
centerpiece of the new AI-Internet synthesis.

This workshop addresses researchers extending Web techniques by using AI
methods, or transferring AI techniques to the Web in an attempt to create
intelligent business agents. The current workshop builds on previous
workshops such as BASeWEB'03 and '02, Novel E-Commerce Applications of
Agents and Semantic Web-based E-Commerce and Rules Markup Languages.

  
The main goal of the workshop is to bring together researchers working on
E-business, Agents, Web Systems and the Semantic Web to explore novel uses
of AI techniques in the Web.



Panel 

In addition, a panel session on "Machine Learning for Intelligent Business
Agents: Successes and Challenges" will be held. This is an open session
which will feature three or four leading researchers in the field. More
details to follow.



Topics of interest 
  
All topics related to agents and e-business are welcome. Topics of interest
include, but are not restricted to: 
   
* Semantic Web approaches and architectures 
* Semantic Web services 
* Web agents for producers and consumers 
* E-business architectures in the Semantic Web 
* Business agent architectures  
* Knowledge management and e-business agents  
* Product and service codes/registries (e.g., UNSPSC/UDDI) 
* Description logics and web ontologies 
* Extended Horn logics and rule markup techniques (e.g., RuleML)  
* Application areas for rules (e.g., P3P, XACML, ebXML, DRM, etc.)  
* Belief logics and planning for multiple agents 
* Negotiation (bargaining, auctions and trust) 
* Inference engines: deduction and induction  
* Distributed deduction for the Semantic Web  
* Natural language interfaces for business agents 
* Adaptive business agents 
* Web service composition and choreography 
* Machine learning for adaptive systems and user modeling 
* Human-business agent interaction/cooperation 
* Lessons learned from implemented systems 



Workshop format 
  
The workshop will commence with some short introductory remarks by the
organizers, followed by an invited talk. The main part of the session will
then be devoted to presentations of submitted works. The workshop will then
conclude with a panel session on issues dealing with agents in machine
learning.

  
Participation and Submissions 

Participation in this workshop is by invitation only and invitees must be
registered for the AI2003 conference. Also attendance is limited. Therefore,
in case that a selection becomes necessary, we ask researchers that just
want to attend the workshop without contributing a paper to send a short
email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] expressing their particular interest in the
workshop.

Researchers interested in contributing a paper should send it to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in PDF format ONLY), up to 10 pages. Papers may already be
prepared in one of the Elsevier formats.

The papers will be reviewed by the program committee members. All accepted
papers will be included into the workshop notes and their authors will be
invited to the workshop. The objective is to cover a broad variety of
concepts and contributions to the goals stated above. To facilitate a lively
and interesting discussion, we will try to make all the papers available to
the participants of the workshop before the workshop takes place. 

Workshop organizers can submit paper(s) subject to the following extra
conditions:  Papers will be submitted blind, i.e. given a double-blind
review. None of the reviewers of those papers will be organizers of the
workshop. Any decisions regarding those papers will be in camera, not
including the author. 

  

After workshop activities 

A special issue of Computational Intelligence is being planned to feature
revised workshop papers. Only authors of accepted papers will be invited to
resubmit their work to this special issue. 

Revised papers from previous editions of this workshop have resulted in: 

* A special issue of Computational Intelligence Vol. 18, No. 4. November
2002 (2001 edition of the workshop called Novel E-Commerce Applications of
Agents). 

* Two special sections of Electronic Commerce Research and Applications,
Vol. 2, No. 4, Winter 2003 and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 2004  (BASeWEB'02).

* A special issue of Computational Intelligence Vol 20, No. 4, November 2004
(BASeWEB'03). 

  
Important dates 
  
Submissions/Requests for Participation:         Feb 20, 2004  
Notifications of Acceptance/Invitations:        Mar 17, 2004 
Camera-ready paper due:                         April 9, 2004 
Workshop:                                       May 16, 2004 
  
  
Organizing committee 

Harold Boley (NRC, Fredericton, Canada) 
Scott Buffett (NRC, Fredericton, Canada) 
Ali Ghorbani (UNB, Fredericton, Canada) 
Bruce Spencer (NRC, Fredericton, Canada) 
Said Tabet (Macgregor, Boston, USA) 



Machine Learning Panel Organizer 

Daniel Silver (Acadia University, Canada) 



Program Committee 

David Ash 
Stephen Marsh 
Hamada Ghenniwa 
Gord McCalla 
Xiaolin Niu 
Sandy Liu 
Elhadi Shakshuki 
Danny Silver 
Michael Sintek 
Gerd Wagner 

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