S. Iacob, K. Nieuwenhuis, N. Wijngaards, G. Pavlin, and B. Veelen. Intelligent Distributed Computing III, Proceedings of the 3rd International
Symposium on Intelligent Distributed Computing - IDC 2009, volume 237 of Studies in Computational Intelligence, page 237--242. Springer, (October 2009)
Abstract
We describe several principles for designing Actor-Agent Communities
(AAC) as collectives of autonomous problem solving entities (software
agents and human experts) that self-organize and collaborate at solving
complex problems. One of the main distinctive aspects of the AAC
is their ability to integrate in a meaningful way the expertise and
reasoning of humans with different information processing algorithms
performed by software agents, without requiring a unique and complete
description of the problem and solution spaces.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Iacob:2009:idc
%A Iacob, Sorin
%A Nieuwenhuis, Kees
%A Wijngaards, Niek
%A Pavlin, Gregor
%A Veelen, Bernard van
%B Intelligent Distributed Computing III, Proceedings of the 3rd International
Symposium on Intelligent Distributed Computing - IDC 2009
%D 2009
%E Papadopoulos, George Angelos
%E Badica, Costin
%I Springer
%K Actor Agent Communities, Computer Computing Design, Distributed System Systems architecture, of technology thesis
%P 237--242
%T Actor-Agent Communities: Design Approaches
%U http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/conf/idc/idc2009.html
%V 237
%X We describe several principles for designing Actor-Agent Communities
(AAC) as collectives of autonomous problem solving entities (software
agents and human experts) that self-organize and collaborate at solving
complex problems. One of the main distinctive aspects of the AAC
is their ability to integrate in a meaningful way the expertise and
reasoning of humans with different information processing algorithms
performed by software agents, without requiring a unique and complete
description of the problem and solution spaces.
@inproceedings{Iacob:2009:idc,
abstract = {We describe several principles for designing Actor-Agent Communities
(AAC) as collectives of autonomous problem solving entities (software
agents and human experts) that self-organize and collaborate at solving
complex problems. One of the main distinctive aspects of the AAC
is their ability to integrate in a meaningful way the expertise and
reasoning of humans with different information processing algorithms
performed by software agents, without requiring a unique and complete
description of the problem and solution spaces.},
added-at = {2017-03-16T11:50:55.000+0100},
author = {Iacob, Sorin and Nieuwenhuis, Kees and Wijngaards, Niek and Pavlin, Gregor and Veelen, Bernard van},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e97536cd04cbb36ae44d5779ec970793/krevelen},
booktitle = {Intelligent Distributed Computing III, Proceedings of the 3rd International
Symposium on Intelligent Distributed Computing - IDC 2009},
editor = {Papadopoulos, George Angelos and Badica, Costin},
interhash = {1234b82f9bbd7f556c28fa50051e0de8},
intrahash = {e97536cd04cbb36ae44d5779ec970793},
keywords = {Actor Agent Communities, Computer Computing Design, Distributed System Systems architecture, of technology thesis},
location = {Ayia Napa, Cyprus},
month = oct,
pages = {237--242},
publisher = {Springer},
series = {Studies in Computational Intelligence},
timestamp = {2017-03-16T11:54:14.000+0100},
title = {Actor-Agent Communities: Design Approaches},
url = {http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/conf/idc/idc2009.html},
volume = 237,
year = 2009
}