Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Advanced Distributed Systems: 5th International School and Symposium, ISSADS 2005, Guadalajara, Mexico, January 24-28, 2005, Revised Selected Papers
Félix F. Ramos ; Victor Larios Rosillo ; Herwig Unger (eds.)
En conferencia: 5º International Symposium and School on Advancex Distributed Systems (ISSADS) . Guadalajara, Mexico . January 24, 2005 - January 28, 2005
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Theory of Computation; Computer Communication Networks; Software Engineering; Operating Systems; Information Storage and Retrieval; Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet)
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
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No detectada | 2005 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-28063-7
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-31674-9
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
doi: 10.1007/11533962_41
Memory as an Active Component of a Behavioral Animation System
David Panzoli; Hervé Luga; Yves Duthen
Our research is interested in behavioral animation among virtual reality applications. A major concern in this field is animating background actors and modeling their interactions. The aim is to provide virtual agents behaviors enabling them to evolve an autonomous and coordinated way in dynamic environments. The behavior is modeled through the standard perception/decision/action loop where the characteristics of the decision module determine the agent abilities. The artificial intelligence “cognitive” agents have reasoning capabilities upon symbolic representations of the objects surrounding them, the way humans do. The artificial life agents possess the reactive and adaptive features from life imitation techniques. The canvas of behavioral animation combine both approaches in order to obtain autonomous, coherent, reactive and adaptive agents. The so-called “hybrid” agents are for the most cognitive agents including reactive features. Two properties follow: they handle symbolic information and they store it in a memory regarded as a passive module. We propose a different approach, focused on memory. We consider memory as an active component of cognition and reasoning or intelligence as the emergent expression of its operating. While keeping an “artificial life” view, we propose an original hybrid architecture which avoids the traditional reactiveness/cognition dichotomy and relies on distributed implicit mental representations. Our model is a neural networks based architecture where two dimensions are considered: Whereas a vertical dimension models the procedural perception/action associations which form the reactiveness of a behavior, a horizontal dimension introduces the semantic concept association.
Palabras clave: Mental Representation; Semantic Memory; Symbolic Representation; Human Memory; Passive Module.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 452-464
doi: 10.1007/11533962_42
Growing Functional Modules, a Prospective Paradigm for Epigenetic Artificial Intelligence
Jérôme Leboeuf Pasquier
Epigenesis postulates that intelligence may arise in a system thanks to an adequate developmental process interacting with its environment. Robotics constitutes the most suitable field to implement this approach. This paper presents the underlying concept, an earlier proposal and a potential implementation of a prospective paradigm named Growing Functional Modules. This paradigm has been conceived to allow the design and the automatic development of a distributed and dynamic architecture able to gradually control an epigenetic robot. An illustration is given applying the paradigm to create a simple artificial brain for a mushroom shaped robot.
Palabras clave: Functional Module; Sensing Area; Programming Task; Global Goal; Positive Phototaxis.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 465-471
doi: 10.1007/11533962_43
Specifying Agent’s Goals in 3D Scenarios Using Process Algebras
Fabiel Zúñiga; Félix Ramos; H. Ivan Piza
This paper presents a method to specify agent’s goals using process algebras. Formal specification of agent’s goal is important in goal oriented works because it allows more detailed description about what we want an agent to do and also is possible to detect possible problems. In this paper we present the method we use to specify formally agent’s goals in GeDA-3D a platform useful to implement distributed applications where a 3D interface is useful.
Palabras clave: Behavior Expression; Parallel Composition; Logical Expression; Process Algebra; Collective Agent.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 472-482
doi: 10.1007/11533962_44
A New Approach for Offer Evaluation in Multi-agent System Negotiation Based in Evidential Paraconsistent Logic
Fabiano M. Hasegawa; Bráulio C. Ávila; Marcos A. H. Shmeil
This paper presents a Paraconsistent Approach based on a heuristic of multi-valued decrement list followed by formalization into Evidential Paraconsistent Logic to evaluate offers in a negotiation session. The mission of an organization stands for its goals and also leads corrections likely to occur in the posture adopted by the organization before the society. In order to fulfill the goals of the organization, this one needs to interact with other components of the society. Within an organization each individual responsible for the sale and purchase of either commodities or services detains knowledge concerning possible values of the criteria used to represent a determined commodity or service which may be either offered or accepted in a negotiation. So, an offer may be seen as an inconsistency caused by the previous individual knowledge of the negotiator and the incoming offer. When compared to the Utility Value Approach , the Paraconsistent one converges toward the negotiation ending with fewer interactions.
Palabras clave: Multi-agent Systems; Negotiation; Offer Evaluation; Paraconsistent Logic.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 483-494
doi: 10.1007/11533962_45
A Voice-Enabled Assistant in a Multi-agent System for e-Government Services
Emerson Cabrera Paraiso; Jean-Paul A. Barthès
This paper describes the design of a voice-enabled Personal Assistant to support users (civil servants) advising citizens in an e-Government multi-agent system. We present the assistant intelligent interface architecture, emphasizing the role of ontologies to knowledge handling and how the natural language dialogue is conducted. We also present a system overview, where agents are encapsulated as WEB Services. The main goal of this approach is to offer a system capable of performing tasks through an intuitive interface, allowing experienced and less experienced users to interact with it in an easy and comfortable way.
Palabras clave: Service Agent; Domain Ontology; Dialogue System; Dialogue Manager; Soap Message.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 495-503
doi: 10.1007/11533962_46
CAS – An Interface Generator in Natural Language to Information System
Cezar Augusto Schipiura; Edson Emílio Scalabrin
With the Web popularization, the digital inclusion comes motivating the research and development of engines of more sophisticated search each time concentrating in the concepts of the Web Semantics that incorporates semantic elements in the formatting of their concepts and propitiates a search with bigger intelligence. Such intelligence characterizes for the quality or precision of the knowledge retrieved or returned in reply to one determined request, involving a structure of how the knowledge is represented, accessed, retrieved, manipulated and enriched. The intention of this process is to enable to the executive professionals to interact naturally with computers using the natural language where the computers understand the submitted questions it and answer using the same terms of the question in understandable way, guiding them in complex decisions, allowing that they can occupy of nobler tasks, the businesses of their company.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 504-515
doi: 10.1007/11533962_47
A Formal Approach to Model Multiagent Interactions Using the B Formal Method
Hind Fadil; Jean-Luc Koning
This paper is within the scope of methodical approaches for producing flexible and reliable formal specifications of interactions protocols between agents in a multiagent system. The basic idea behind it is to define the agents as an abstract machines described by their behavior. Such machines are able to create agents, interact with other agents of a same working group via roles usin precise communication protocols. Our goal is to model the interaction between agents with a formal method that is able to check and then prove our initial UML specification. In order to obtain the final specification with this approach, we chose to use the B method and illustrated it with a case study.
Palabras clave: multiagent system; formal specification; B method; interaction protocols.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 516-528
doi: 10.1007/11533962_48
Behavioral Self-control of Agent-Based Virtual Pedestrians
Emmanuelle Grislin-Le Strugeon; David Hanon; René Mandiau
Agents need some kind of autonomy to act in open and dynamic environments. However, the resulting behavior is not always well adapted to the situation. The use of models that combine different reasoning levels creates other difficulties. The management of the control transfer and balance between abstract time-consuming reasoning processes and reactive quick low-level behaviors are particularly complex. Our model is based on the self-observation and control of agents. The main topic is the inconsistency detection used to transfer the control between contiguous levels. This is detailed in the context of virtual pedestrians design.
- Artificial Life and Multi-agent Systems | Pp. 529-537
doi: 10.1007/11533962_49
Security Challenges of Distributed e-Learning Systems
Roberto Gómez Cárdenas; Erika Mata Sánchez
Security considerations play an increasingly important role for distributed computing. In today’s Internet age, academia requires sharing, distributing, merging, changing information, linking applications and other resources within and among universities and other related organizations. Because e -learning systems are open, distributed and interconnected, then security becomes an important challenge in order to insure that interested actors only have access to the right information at the appropriate time. The purpose of this paper is to give an in-depth understanding of most important security challenges that can be relevant for distributed e -learning systems.
Palabras clave: Security Policy; Security Requirement; Component Application; Security Challenge; Distribute Computing Environment.
- ISSADS 2004 | Pp. 538-544
doi: 10.1007/11533962_50
A Component-Based Transactional Service, Including Advanced Transactional Models
Colombe Hérault; Sergiy Nemchenko; Sylvain Lecomte
The component-based model is one possible response to the increased heterogeneity of distributed systems. This model allows developers to focus on applicative logic and leaves the implementation of the technical aspects to the component platform. However, the technical services themselves do not reap the advantages provided by the components. In this paper, we propose structuring the technical services as Fractal components. We demonstrate the benefits of such a proposition through a precise decomposition of the transactional service. We also introduce an application that uses our component-based transactional service. In order to show the feasibility of our solution, we present a prototype, which is both a component-based transactional service and a solution for building such a composition. The preliminary test results for our prototype are also presented.
Palabras clave: transaction; technical service; component-based model; adaptability.
- ISSADS 2004 | Pp. 545-556