The Role of Norms and Electronic Institutions in Multi-Agent Systems - The HarmonIA Framework (Paperback, 2004 ed.)


"It is not the consciousness of men that defines their existence, but, on the contrary, their social existence determines their consciousness." Karl Marx In recent years, several researchers have argued that the design of multi-agent sys tems (MAS) in complex, open environments can benefit from social abstractions in order to cope with problems in coordination, cooperation and trust among agents, problems which are also present in human societies. The agent-mediated electronic institutions (e-institutions for short) is a new and promising field which focuses in the concepts of norms and institutions in order to pro vide normative frameworks to restrict or guide the behaviour of (software) agents. The main idea is that the interactions among a group of (software) agents are ruled by a set of explicit norms expressed in a computational language representation that agents can interpret. Such norms should not be considered as a negative constraining factor but as an aid that guides the agents' choices and reduces the complexity ofthe environment making the behaviour of other agents more predictable."

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Product Description

"It is not the consciousness of men that defines their existence, but, on the contrary, their social existence determines their consciousness." Karl Marx In recent years, several researchers have argued that the design of multi-agent sys tems (MAS) in complex, open environments can benefit from social abstractions in order to cope with problems in coordination, cooperation and trust among agents, problems which are also present in human societies. The agent-mediated electronic institutions (e-institutions for short) is a new and promising field which focuses in the concepts of norms and institutions in order to pro vide normative frameworks to restrict or guide the behaviour of (software) agents. The main idea is that the interactions among a group of (software) agents are ruled by a set of explicit norms expressed in a computational language representation that agents can interpret. Such norms should not be considered as a negative constraining factor but as an aid that guides the agents' choices and reduces the complexity ofthe environment making the behaviour of other agents more predictable."

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Birkhauser Verlag AG

Country of origin

Switzerland

Series

Whitestein Series in Software Agent Technologies and Autonomic Computing

Release date

April 2004

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

2004

Authors

Dimensions

254 x 178 x 15mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

274

Edition

2004 ed.

ISBN-13

978-3-7643-7057-2

Barcode

9783764370572

Categories

LSN

3-7643-7057-2



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