| Birgit Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Klaus Fischer, editor, Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. 1996. DFKI Document D-96-06. |
....These works are principally based on a view of the system as a computational organization which consist of di#erent interacting entities. Some of the relevant existing approaches are: the work of Kinny on the BDI model [22] the GAIA methodology [30] the works of Kendall [21] and Bursmeister [6], the AUML approach [24] the specification of DESIRE [5] the methodologies MAS CommonKADS [15] and MASSIVE [23] and more recently the works of TROPOS [26] MaSE [29] and Message [10] The majority of these approaches entail di#erent phases, models and or artifacts, in order to completely or ....
B. Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. Technical Report D-96-06, DFKI, 1996.
....type serviceType #standard# bespoke# produce quote serviceType = service quote = nil produce quote, serviceIsLegal serviceType = nil) service = serviceIsLegal) inform customerDetails, customers know Figure 14. The acquaintance model. those such as [4, 24] which take existing OO modelling techniques or methodologies as their basis, seeking either to extend and adapt the models and define a methodology for their use, or to directly extend the applicability of OO methodologies and techniques, such as design patterns, to the design of agent systems, ....
B. Burmeister, "Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design," in Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems, K. Fisher (Ed.), 1996, DFKI Document D-96-06.
....informal development methodologies for the analysis and design of agent based system. These can be broadly divided into two groups: those that take their inspiration from object oriented development, and either extend existing OO methodologies or adapt OO methodologies to the purposes of AOSE [10, 45, 77, 54, 18, 3, 44, 56, 70]; those that adapt knowledge engineering or other techniques [8, 49, 36, 16] In the remainder of this section, we review some representative samples of this work. As representatives of the first category, we survey the AAII methodology of Kinny et al. [45] the Gaia methodology of Wooldridge ....
Birgit Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Klaus Fischer, editor, Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. 1996. DFKI Document D-96-06.
....and (d) CostBespokeService. CustomerAgent Customer CustomerHandler QuoteManager CustomerServiceDivisionAgent 1 CustomerVetter VetCustomerAgent 3. 10 NetworkDesignerAgent NetworkDesigner 1. 10 LegalAdvisorAgent LegalAdvisor 1. 5 Figure 13. The agent model ffl those such as [4, 24] which take existing OO modelling techniques or methodologies as their basis, seeking either to extend and adapt the models and define a methodology for their use, or to directly extend the applicability of OO methodologies and techniques, such as design patterns, to the design of agent systems, ....
Birgit Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Klaus Fischer, editor, Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. 1996. DFKI Document D-96-06.
....methodologies [2] These methodologies have gained widespread acceptance and use. In particular, the emphasis of such techniques on both encapsulation and interaction among entities suggests that a multi agent system could actually be built by exploiting an object oriented methodology [27, 5, 30]. However, object oriented approaches fall short in supporting the full notions of agents , and organisations as first class entities [12, 20] This is hardly surprising since these represent the two main distinguishing features of multi agent systems with respect to objectbased systems. ....
....well as the richness of their interactions. On the other hand, some proposals seek to extend and adapt object oriented models and techniques to define a methodology for use in multiagent systems. This can lead, for example, to extended models for representing agent behaviour and their interactions [5, 23, 30], as well as to agent tuned extensions of UML [27, 30] However, although these proposals can sometimes achieve a good modelling of the autonomous behaviour of agents and of their interactions, they lack the conceptual mechanisms for adequately dealing with organisations and agent societies. A ....
B. Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Working Notes of the KI96 Workshop on Agent-oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. DFKI, 1996.
....1. 5 Figure 8: Agent Model for Business Process Management 6 Related Work As a result of the development and application of robust agent technologies, there has been a surge of interest in agent oriented methodologies and modelling techniques in the last few years. Many approaches, such as [3, 16] take existing OO modelling techniques or methodologies as their basis, seeking either to extend and adapt the models and define a methodology for their use, or to directly extend the applicability of OO methodologies and techniques, such as design patterns, to the design of agent systems. Other ....
Birgit Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Klaus Fischer, editor, Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. 1996. DFKI Document D-96-06.
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Birgit Burmeister. Models and methodologies for agent-oriented analysis and design. In Klaus Fischer, editor, Working Notes of the KI'96 Workshop on Agent-Oriented Programming and Distributed Systems. 1996. DFKI Document D-96-06.
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