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Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies III [electronic resource] : Third International Workshop, DALT 2005, Utrecht, The Netherlands, July 25, 2005, Selected and Revised Papers / edited by Matteo Baldoni, Ulle Endriss, Andrea Omicini, Paolo Torroni.

Contributor(s): Baldoni, Matteo [editor.] | Endriss, Ulle [editor.] | Omicini, Andrea [editor.] | Torroni, Paolo [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence: 3904Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2006Edition: 1st ed. 2006.Description: XII, 248 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783540331070.Subject(s): Artificial intelligence | Computer networks  | Software engineering | Compilers (Computer programs) | Computer science | Artificial Intelligence | Computer Communication Networks | Software Engineering | Compilers and Interpreters | Computer Science Logic and Foundations of ProgrammingAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 006.3 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Agent Programming and Beliefs -- Beliefs in Agent Implementation -- Modelling Uncertainty in Agent Programming -- Complete Axiomatizations of Finite Syntactic Epistemic States -- Architectures and Logic Programming -- An Architecture for Rational Agents -- LAIMA: A Multi-agent Platform Using Ordered Choice Logic Programming -- A Distributed Architecture for Norm-Aware Agent Societies -- About Declarative Semantics of Logic-Based Agent Languages -- Knowledge Representation and Reasoning -- Goal Decomposition Tree: An Agent Model to Generate a Validated Agent Behaviour -- Resource-Bounded Belief Revision and Contraction -- Agent-Oriented Programming with Underlying Ontological Reasoning -- Dynagent: An Incremental Forward-Chaining HTN Planning Agent in Dynamic Domains -- A Combination of Explicit and Deductive Knowledge with Branching Time: Completeness and Decidability Results -- Coordination and Model Checking -- An Intensional Programming Approach to Multi-agent Coordination in a Distributed Network of Agents -- A Tableau Method for Verifying Dialogue Game Protocols for Agent Communication.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: The workshop on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies is a we- established venue for researchers interested in sharing their experiences in the areas of declarative and formal aspects of agents and multi-agent systems, and in engineering and technology. Today it is still a challenge to develop techno- gies that can satisfy the requirements of complex agent systems. The design and development of multi-agent systems still calls for models and technologies that ensure predictability, enable feature discovery, allow for the veri?cation of properties, and guarantee ?exibility. Declarative approaches are potentially a valuable means for satisfying the needs of multi-agent system developers and for specifying multi-agent systems. DALT 2005, the third edition of the workshop, was held in Utrecht, The Netherlands, in July 2005, in conjunction with AAMAS 2005, the Fourth Int- national Joint Conference on Agents and Multiagent Systems. Over 30 persons attended the workshop con?rming the success of the previous editions in M- bourne 2003 (LNAI 2990) and New York 2004 (LNAI 3476). The workshop series is a forum of discussion aimed both at supporting the transfer of decla- tive paradigms and techniques into the broader community of agent researchers andpractitioners, and atbringing theissuesofdesigningreal-world andcomplex agent systems to the attention of researchers working on declarative progr- ming and technologies.
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Agent Programming and Beliefs -- Beliefs in Agent Implementation -- Modelling Uncertainty in Agent Programming -- Complete Axiomatizations of Finite Syntactic Epistemic States -- Architectures and Logic Programming -- An Architecture for Rational Agents -- LAIMA: A Multi-agent Platform Using Ordered Choice Logic Programming -- A Distributed Architecture for Norm-Aware Agent Societies -- About Declarative Semantics of Logic-Based Agent Languages -- Knowledge Representation and Reasoning -- Goal Decomposition Tree: An Agent Model to Generate a Validated Agent Behaviour -- Resource-Bounded Belief Revision and Contraction -- Agent-Oriented Programming with Underlying Ontological Reasoning -- Dynagent: An Incremental Forward-Chaining HTN Planning Agent in Dynamic Domains -- A Combination of Explicit and Deductive Knowledge with Branching Time: Completeness and Decidability Results -- Coordination and Model Checking -- An Intensional Programming Approach to Multi-agent Coordination in a Distributed Network of Agents -- A Tableau Method for Verifying Dialogue Game Protocols for Agent Communication.

The workshop on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies is a we- established venue for researchers interested in sharing their experiences in the areas of declarative and formal aspects of agents and multi-agent systems, and in engineering and technology. Today it is still a challenge to develop techno- gies that can satisfy the requirements of complex agent systems. The design and development of multi-agent systems still calls for models and technologies that ensure predictability, enable feature discovery, allow for the veri?cation of properties, and guarantee ?exibility. Declarative approaches are potentially a valuable means for satisfying the needs of multi-agent system developers and for specifying multi-agent systems. DALT 2005, the third edition of the workshop, was held in Utrecht, The Netherlands, in July 2005, in conjunction with AAMAS 2005, the Fourth Int- national Joint Conference on Agents and Multiagent Systems. Over 30 persons attended the workshop con?rming the success of the previous editions in M- bourne 2003 (LNAI 2990) and New York 2004 (LNAI 3476). The workshop series is a forum of discussion aimed both at supporting the transfer of decla- tive paradigms and techniques into the broader community of agent researchers andpractitioners, and atbringing theissuesofdesigningreal-world andcomplex agent systems to the attention of researchers working on declarative progr- ming and technologies.

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