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Busetta, P., Howden, N., Ronnquist, R., and Hodgson, A.: Structuring BDI Agents in Functional Clusters, in Intelligent Agents VI: Theories, Architectures and Languages, LNAI Volume 1757 (N. Jennings & Y. Lesperance eds), pp 277-289, SpringerVerlag, Heidelburg, Germany (2000)

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Agent Specification Using Multi-Context Systems - Parsons, Jennings, Sabater..   (Correct)

....of managing resources, and such an agent might have a module modeling this ability. Similarly, such an agent might have a module for generating plans, a module for handling communication, and so on. Thus modules capture exactly the same idea as the capabilities discussed by Busetta et al. [4]. Unlike Busetta et al. we do not currently allow modules to be nested inside one another, largely because we have not yet found it necessary to do so. However, it seems likely that we will need to develop a means of handling nested hierachies of modules in order to build more complex agents than ....

P. Busetta, N. Howden, R. Ronnquist, and A. Hodgson. Structuring BDI agents in functional clusters. In N. R. Jennings and Y Lesperance, editors, Intelligent Agents VI. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1999.


Caselp, A Rapid Prototyping Environment For Agent Based Software - Zini (2001)   (Correct)

....constructs. These constructs are: Agent. The agent construct is used to de ne the behaviour of an intelligent software agent. This includes capabilities the agent has, the type of messages and events it responds to, and the plans it uses to achieve its goals. Capability. The capability construct [12] allows for the functional components that make up an agent to be aggregated and reused. A capability can be made up of plans, events, databases and other capabilities that together serve to give an agent certain abilities. An agent can, in turn, be made up of a number of capabilities, each of ....

P. Busetta, N. Howden, R. Ronnquist, and A. Hodgson. Structuring BDI Agents in Functional Clusters. In N. R. Jennings and Y. Lesperance, editors, Intelligent Agents VI. Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages - 6th International Workshop, number 1757 in Lecture Notes in Articial Intelligence, Orlando, FL, USA, July 1999. Springer-Verlag.


Agent-Based Query Optimisation in a Grid Environment - Serafini, Stockinger.. (2001)   (Correct)

....is based on a set of intelligent cooperative agents [8] autonomous software entities that can flexibly execute actions in their operative environment. This technology naturally allows us to model task based organisations, where different tasks are identified and allocated to various agents [9]. In our architecture we support different sub systems like the indexing component, the query scheduler, or the caching sub system, as well as user queries. An agent carries out operations on behalf of a user or another program, and in this process represents or has knowledge of the user s goals ....

....clean interfaces for interacting with other parts like Grid monitoring or Grid workload management. Our first goal is to implement an agent prototype for the architecture we have presented. The target platform for implementation will be JACK Intelligent Agents TM by Agent Oriented Software [9]. JACK is an environment that extends Java for building, running and integrating commercial grade multi agent systems using a component based approach. Since the main bottleneck of our architecture is the access to the tape drive, the prototype will initially be designed for minimising the amount ....

P. Busetta and N. Howden and R. Rnnquist and A. Hodgson, Structuring BDI Agents in Functional Clusters, Intelligent Agents VI, ed. N.R. Jennings and Y. Lesperance, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 1757, Springer-Verlag, 2000.


Using Multi-Context Systems to Engineer Executable Agents - Sabater, Sierra, Parsons, .. (1999)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

....of managing resources, and such an agent might have a module modeling this ability. Similarly, such an agent might have a module for generating plans, a module for handling communication, and so on. Thus modules capture exactly the same idea as the capabilities discussed by Busetta et al. [4]. Unlike Busetta et al. we do not currently allow modules to be nested inside one another, largely because we have not yet found it necessary to do so. However, it seems likely that we will need to develop a means of handling nested hierachies of modules in order to build more complex agents than ....

P. Busetta, N. Howden, Ronnquist R, and A. Hodgson. Structuring BDI agents in functional clusters. In N. R. Jennings and Y Lesperance, editors, Intelligent Agents VI. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1999.


ACCESS: An Agent Architecture for Ubiquitous Service.. - Muldoon, O'Hare.. (2003)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

No context found.

Busetta, P., Howden, N., Ronnquist, R., and Hodgson, A.: Structuring BDI Agents in Functional Clusters, in Intelligent Agents VI: Theories, Architectures and Languages, LNAI Volume 1757 (N. Jennings & Y. Lesperance eds), pp 277-289, SpringerVerlag, Heidelburg, Germany (2000)


ACCESS: An Agent Architecture for Ubiquitous Service.. - Muldoon, O'Hare.. (2003)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

No context found.

Busetta, P., Howden, N., Ronnquist, R., and Hodgson, A.: Structuring BDI Agents in Functional Clusters, in Intelligent Agents VI: Theories, Architectures and Languages, LNAI Volume 1757 (N. Jennings & Y. Lesperance eds), pp 277-289, SpringerVerlag, Heidelburg, Germany (2000)

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