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Ann Math Artif Intell (2016) 78:177–179 DOI 10.1007/s10472-016-9530-x 1 2 Jur ¨ gen Dix · Sven Ove Hansson · 3 4 Gabriele Kern-Isberner · Guillermo R. Simari Published online: 17 October 2016 © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016 1 Introduction The present special issue is based on work presented at the Belief Change and Argumenta- tion in Multi-Agent Scenarios Seminar, held on June 3rd – 7th, 2013, at Schloss Dagstuhl, Wadern, Germany. The papers in this issue profited from the discussions and interactions during this productive event: they are the result of a Call for papers that we put together after the seminar. From the ten originally submitted papers, after a careful reviewing pro- cess (each paper was evaluated by at lerast three reviewers), five were finally accepted and found their way into this special issue. The Dagstuhl seminar brought together researchers from (1) Multiagent Systems, (2) Belief Revision, and (3) Argumentation: these three important fields of research contribute different perspectives on an array of problems that elicit important new research questions that can be addressed combining insights obtained in those areas. Research on multiagent systems has produced increasingly relevant modeling results characterizing a general paradigm for distributed problem
Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence – Springer Journals
Published: Oct 17, 2016
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