Principles and Practices for Planning in Execution
To be held in conjunction with
ICAPS'07: 17th International Conference on Automated Planning & Scheduling
September 22-26th, 2007, Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Aim of the Workshop
Early approaches to robot control were based on the Sense-Plan-Act (SPA) paradigm with planning as the core of a control-loop. Using this paradigm, real-world applications merging deliberative and reactive decision have made remarkable strides in the last few years. These systems have evolved from the classical concept of three-layered control running off-board, to demonstrate dynamic control of a multitude of platforms using onboard and hybrid mixed-initiative techniques. In the meantime, automated planning techniques have evolved substantially in the areas of modeling, reasoning methods, and search algorithms. Together these advances open up new possibilities for how planning technology can be applied in execution, but also reveal new concerns like the interaction between different decisional components or the possible conflict between decision and environmental reality. The goal of this workshop is to integrate practical experience in fielded autonomous systems with theoretical and empirical results in automated planning to stimulate new perspectives on the roles and requirements for planning in execution.
The workshop seeks contributions in two key areas. The first is focused on applications of planning in execution dealing with architectural or modeling choices to deal with the dynamic real-world environment. Papers should indicate how the system impacts all stages of application development and deployment. Contributions in this area should elaborate on the rationale underpinning the design and the performance of the resulting system in the field. The second key area is focused on theoretical and empirical results for specific automated planning techniques for on-line use in dynamic and uncertain environments. Contributions in this area should address how and why the methods described might be incorporated into a larger application context.
Scope
The scope of the workshop includes (but not limited to) the following :
- Planning and Execution in Agent architectures
- Plan representation and the impact to solving real-world problems
- Semantics of plan execution and their impact to dealing with uncertainty (temporal, spatial and geometric)
- Decision-theoretic approaches to mission planning and execution
- Bounded (time and space) search techniques which deal with environmental uncertainty for plan execution
- Machine Learning for adaptive event-response
- Planning and Execution in unstructured, unknown or hostile conditions.
Format
The workshop will span a full day and include a poster session, an invited talk and wrap up with a panel discussion. This workshop is aligned and complementary to one on Moving Planning and Scheduling Systems into the Real World at ICAPS'07. Our workshop will focus on a specific aspect of embodiment of AI Planning/Scheduling technology, the latter workshop will explore the consequent issues of deployment.
Paper Submission
Submissions may be regular papers (at most 6-8 pages) in PDF formal only. All papers should conform to the AAAI style template. Submissions will be reviewed by at least two referees. All submissions should be sent to icaps07-planexec @ mbari.org with the subject line ICAPS'07 Workshop Submission.
All workshop participants will need to be registered while at least one of the authors of accepted paper will need to be registered for ICAPS'07.
Important Dates
The schedule of important dates for the workshop is as follows:
| Paper submission deadline | 30 June 2007 |
| Notification of acceptance | 30 July 2007 |
| Camera-ready version deadline | 6 August 2007 |
| Workshop date | 22 September 2007 |
Organization
| Mark Boddy | Adventium Labs,
USA |
|
| Félix Ingrand | LAAS, Toulouse,
France |
(Co-Chair) |
| Conor McGann | MBARI, USA |
|
| Paul Morris | NASA Ames, USA |
|
| Nicola Muscettola | Google,
USA |
|
| David Musliner | Honeywell, USA |
|
| Frédéric Py | MBARI, USA |
|
| Kanna Rajan | MBARI, USA |
(Co-Chair) |
| Radu Bogdan Rusu |
TUM,
Munich, Germany |
|
| Reid Simmons | CMU, USA |
|
|
Vandi Verma |
NASA Ames, USA |
|
| David Wettergreen | CMU, USA |
Additionally we are grateful to the following supplemental reviewers:
| Michael Beetz |
TUM, Munich,
Germany |
| Dan Bryce |
SRI Intnl., USA |
| Richard Dearden | Univ. of Birmingham, UK |
| Ronny Hartanto | Univ. of Osnabrueck, Germany |
| Joachim Hertzberg | Univ. of Osnabrueck, Germany |
| Guillaume Infantes | Univ. of
Maryland, USA |
| Sylvain Joyeux |
LAAS, Toulouse, France |
| Christopher Loerken | Univ. of Osnabrueck, Germany |
|
Florent Teichteil-Konigsbuch |
ONERA, Toulouse, France |
| Gerard Verfaillie | ONERA, Toulouse,
France |
| Shlomo Zilberstein |
UMass, USA |
