Multi-agent communication models for cooperative navigation in complex environments

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 1556-1563
Author(s):  
Jonathan Rodriguez ◽  
Julio Godoy ◽  
Fernando Gutierrez
Author(s):  
Zojan Memon ◽  
◽  
Akhtar Hussain Jalbani ◽  
Mohsin Shaikh ◽  
Rafia Naz Memon ◽  
...  

Web Mining ◽  
2011 ◽  
pp. 228-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Salah Hamdi

Rapidly evolving network and computer technology, coupled with the exponential growth of the services and information available on the Internet, has already brought us to the point where hundreds of millions of people should have fast, pervasive access to a phenomenal amount of information, through desktop machines at work, school and home, through televisions, phones, pagers, and car dashboards, from anywhere and everywhere. The challenge of complex environments is therefore obvious: software is expected to do more in more situations, there are a variety of users (Power/Naive, Techie/ Financial/Clerical, ...), there are a variety of systems (Windows/NT/Mac/Unix, Client/Server, Portable, Distributed Object Manager, Web, ...), there are a variety of interactions (Real-time, Data Bases, Other Players, ...), and there are a variety of resources and goals (time, space, bandwidth, cost, security, quality, ...). To cope with such environments, the promise of information customization systems is becoming highly attractive. In this chapter we discuss important problems in relationship to such systems and smooth the way for possible solutions. The main idea is to approach information customization using a multi-agent paradigm.


Author(s):  
R. Keith Sawyer

Sociology should be the foundational science of social emergence. But to date, sociologists have neglected emergence, and studies of emergence are more common within microeconomics. Moving forward, I argue that a science of social emergence requires two advances beyond current approaches—and that sociology is better positioned than economics to make these advances. First, consistent with existing critiques of microeconomics, I argue that we need a more sophisticated representation of individual agents. Second, I argue that multi-agent models need a more sophisticated representation of interaction processes. The agent communication languages currently used by multi-agent systems researchers are not appropriate for modeling human societies. I conclude by arguing that the scientific study of interaction and emergence will have to migrate out of microeconomics and become a part of sociology. Sociologists, for their part, should embrace multi-agent modeling to pursue a more rigorous study of these traditional sociological issues.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hangyu Mao ◽  
Zhengchao Zhang ◽  
Zhen Xiao ◽  
Zhibo Gong ◽  
Yan Ni

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