| In Intentions in Communication. Edited by P. R. Cohen, J. Morgan, and M. E. Pollack. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusets. M. Boddy and T. Dean. 1989. Solving time-dependent planning problems. |
.... of decision analytic techniques to meta level reasoning (Horvitz et al. 1988; Russell and Wefeld 1989) Finally, there have been a number of complete systems actually implemented, systems that are capable of performing real time behavior in certain restricted dynamic domains (Georgeff and Ingrand 1989; Fehling and Wilber 1989; Dodhiawala et al. 1989) See also Boddy and Dean (1989) for the theory of algorithms appropriate for real time behavior under resource bounds. Bratman, Israel, and Pollack 6 no other human or robot agents, nature often intrudes. 3 During the time it takes to engage in ....
....of plans produced by traditional, hierarchial planners, such as NOAH (Sacerdoti 1977) However, whereas these planners used partial plans only as intermediate representations in the plan formation process, we are suggesting the usefulness of acting on the basis of partial plans. PRS (Georgeff and Ingrand 1989) is an example of a system that makes use of structurally partial plans during execution. Bratman, Israel, and Pollack 11 plan s decomposition and the requirement of consistency. A plan to spend all of one s cash at lunch is inconsistent with a plan to buy a book that includes an intention to ....
In Intentions in Communication. Edited by P. R. Cohen, J. Morgan, and M. E. Pollack. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusets. M. Boddy and T. Dean. 1989. Solving time-dependent planning problems.
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