Agent theories, architectures, and languages: a survey
OA Location
Author(s)
Wooldridge, MJ
Jennings, NR
Type
Conference Paper
Abstract
The concept of an agent has recently become important in Artificial Intelligence (AI), and its relatively youthful subfield, DistributedAI (DAI). Our aim in this paper is to point the reader at what we perceive to be the most important theoretical and practical issues associated with the design and construction of intelligent agents. For convenience, we divide the area into three themes (though as the reader will see, these divisions are at times somewhat arbitrary). Agent theory is concerned with the question of what an agent is, and the use of mathematical formalisms for representing and reasoning about the properties of agents. Agent architectures can be thought of as software engineering models of agents; researchers in this area are primarily concerned with the problem of constructing software or hardware systems that will satisfy the properties specified by agent theorists. Finally, agent languages are software systems for programming and experimenting with agents; these languages typically embody principles proposed by theorists. The paper is not intended to serve as a tutorial introduction to all the issues mentioned; we hope instead simply to identify the key issues, and point to work that elaborates on them. The paper closes with a detailed bibliography, and some biblographical remarks.
Date Issued
1995-12-31
Date Acceptance
1994-08-08
Citation
Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1995, 890, pp.1-39
ISBN
978-3-540-58855-9
ISSN
0302-9743
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Start Page
1
End Page
39
Journal / Book Title
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Volume
890
Copyright Statement
© Springer Verlag 1995. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-58855-8_1
Identifier
http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/252177/
Source
ECAI-94 Workshop on Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages
Subjects
Artificial Intelligence & Image Processing
08 Information And Computing Sciences
Publication Status
Published
Start Date
1994-08-08
Finish Date
1994-08-09
Coverage Spatial
Amsterdam, The Netherlands