scholarly journals Incorporating product-line engineering techniques into agent-oriented software engineering for efficiently building safety-critical, multi-agent systems

Author(s):  
Joshua Jon Dehlinger
2009 ◽  
pp. 773-796
Author(s):  
Manuel Kolp ◽  
Stéphane Faulkner ◽  
Yves Wautelet

Multi-agent systems (MAS) architectures are gaining popularity over traditional ones for building open, distributed, and evolving software required by today’s corporate IT applications such as e-business systems, Web services, or enterprise knowledge bases. Since the fundamental concepts of multi-agent systems are social and intentional rather than object, functional, or implementationoriented, the design of MAS architectures can be eased by using social patterns. They are detailed agent-oriented design idioms to describe MAS architectures composed of autonomous agents that interact and coordinate to achieve their intentions, like actors in human organizations. This article presents social patterns and focuses on a framework aimed to gain insight into these patterns. The framework can be integrated into agent-oriented software engineering methodologies used to build MAS. We consider the Broker social pattern to illustrate the framework. An overview of the mapping from system architectural design (through organizational architectural styles), to system detailed design (through social patterns), is presented with a data integration case study. The automation of creating design patterns is also discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Māra Pudāne ◽  
Egons Lavendelis

Abstract The paper presents general guidelines for designing affective multi-agent systems (affective MASs). The guidelines aim at extending the existing agent-oriented software engineering (AOSE) methodologies to enable them to design affective MASs. The reason why affective mechanisms need specific attention during the design is the fact that the way how both rational tasks and interactions are done differ based on the affective state of the agents. Thus, the paper extends the traditional design approaches with the design of affective mechanisms and includes them in the design of the system as a whole.


Author(s):  
Franco Zambonelli ◽  
Nicholas R. Jennings ◽  
Michael Wooldridge

The multi-agent system paradigm introduces a number of new design/development issues when compared with more traditional approaches to software development and calls for the adoption of new software engineering abstractions. To this end, in this chapter, we elaborate on the potential of analyzing and architecting complex multi-agent systems in terms of computational organizations. Specifically, we identify the appropriate organizational abstractions that are central to the analysis and design of such systems, discuss their role and importance, and show how such abstractions are exploited in the context of the Gaia methodology for multi-agent systems development.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pornpit Wongthongtham ◽  
Darshan Dillon ◽  
Tharam Dillon ◽  
Elizabeth Chang

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