Continuing the series of workshops begun in 1996 (Luck, 1997; Doran et al., 1997; d'Inverno et al.,
1997; Fisher et al., 1997) and held in each of the two years since (Luck et al., 1998; Aylett et al., 1998;
Binmore et al., 1998; Decker et al., 1999; Beer et al., 1999), the 1999 workshop of the UK Special
Interest Group on Multi-Agent Systems (UKMAS'99) took place in Bristol in December. Chaired
and organised by Chris Preist of Hewlett Packard Laboratories, with support from both HP and BT
Laboratories, the workshop brought together a diverse range of participants, from the agent
community in both the UK and abroad, to discuss and present work spanning all areas of agent
research. Although dominated by computer scientists, also present at the meeting were electronic
engineers, computational biologists, philosophers, sociologists, statisticians, game-theorists, economists and behavioural scientists, with both academia and industry well represented. Indeed,
numbers attending these workshops continue to grow, reflecting the continued and rising interest
in agent-based systems. The meeting truly demonstrated the wider view of what the term “agency”
implied to research in other disciplines and the questions raised at the end of presentations were a
pertinent reminder of the diversity of the audience.