| G. Wagner. Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. in J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas (Eds.), Databases and Information Systems. Kluwer Academic Publishers., pages 111--124, 2001. |
....or agents in this context. 1.1 Terminology Being a relatively new research field, agentbased software engineering currently has a set of closely related terms used in research papers, I will thus try to clarify and explain the terms and their relations below. Agent Oriented Programming (AOP)[29, 30] is seen as an improvement and extension of Object Oriented Programming (OOP) Since the word Programming is attached, it means that both concepts are close to the programming language and implementation level. The term 1 Agent Oriented Programming was introduced by Shoham in 1993 [28] ....
....branches of software engineering, e.g. objectoriented software engineering. How are agents distinguished from objects Agent oriented programming (AOP) can be seen as an extension of object oriented programming (OOP) OOP on the other hand can be seen as a successor of structured programming [29, 30]. In OOP the main entity is the object. An object is a logical combination of data structures and their corresponding methods (functions) Objects are successfully being used as abstractions for passive entities (e.g. a house) in the real world, and agents are regarded as a possible successor of ....
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Wagner G. Agent-Oriented Analysis and Design of Organizational Information Systems. In Proc. of Fourth IEEE International Baltic Workshop on Databases and Information Systems, Vilnius (Lithuania), May 2000.
....one does in this case is to interpret the workings of the legacy code as an instance of a BDI theory that is then used as the common model upon which agent interactions are based, and which is thus the basis for the integration of the software components. The Agent Objection Relationship model of [17] (similar to other work reported in this volume) is a clear example of an agent model, based more on entity relationship models than on BDI, used for application building. In our set of engineering applications, the ProcessLink framework used the Redux theory of design to characterize the acts of ....
....engineering methods. This distinction between a syntactic approach to agent definition, which permits an objective distinction between agent software and other kinds, and the semantic approach of ascribing mentalistic characteristics to some software models, is often conflated. For instance, in[17], it is asserted that one difference between the objects in Object Oriented Programming and agents is that agents can perceive events, perform actions, communicate, or make commitments. Objects are passive entities with no such capacities. Not only is this a claim that depends upon a subjective ....
G. Wagner, "Agent-Oriented Analysis and Design of Organizational Information Systems", in Proc. of Fourth IEEE International Baltic Workshop on Databases and Information Systems, Vilnius (Lithuania), May 2000. See also http://www.inf.fu-berlin.de/wagnerg/BalticDB2000.ps.
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G. Wagner. Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. In J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas, editors, Databases and Information Systems. Fourth International Baltic Workshop, Vilnius, Lithuania, May 2000.
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G. Wagner. Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. In J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas, editors, Databases and Information Systems. Fourth International Baltic Workshop, Vilnius, Lithuania, May 2000, Vilnius, Lithuania, 2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
No context found.
G. Wagner. Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. In J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas, editors, Databases and Information Systems. Fourth International Baltic Workshop, Vilnius, Lithuania, May 2000.
No context found.
G. Wagner. Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. in J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas (Eds.), Databases and Information Systems. Kluwer Academic Publishers., pages 111--124, 2001.
No context found.
Wagner, G.: Agent-oriented analysis and design of organizational information systems. in J. Barzdins and A. Caplinskas (Eds.), Databases and Information Systems. Kluwer Academic Publishers. (2001) 111--124
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