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E-raamat: Organizational Principles for Multi-Agent Architectures

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1. 1 Background In this work, we develop a framework for the design of multi-agent systems inspired by (human) organizational principles. Organizations are complex entities formed to ov- come various limitations of individual agencies, such as cognitive, physical, temporal and institutional limitations. There is a parallel between the complexity of organizations and multi-agent systems. Therefore, we explore the use of concepts, methods and techniques from human organizational design as architectural principles for multi-agent systems. Three research lines are presented: organizational modeling and coordination, interop- ability and agent models. Organizational modeling and coordination are concerned with how resources (i. e. agents) can be identi ed and related to each other. In order to have agents cooperate, several issues of interoperability have to be addressed. Agent models deal with the design of individual intelligent software agents, taking into account typical features of agent intelligence. Every (human) activity raises two challenges: division of labor and coordi- tion [ Mintzberg, 1993]. Division of labor is the decomposition of work (or goals) into various distinct tasks. Coordination refers to managing relations between these tasks to carry out the work. The patterns of division of labor, responsibilities (people who do the work), clustering of responsibilities into units and coordination between units can be de ned by organizational structures [ Galbraith, 1973]. The design of an organization should cover how one or more actors are engaged in one or more tasks, where knowledge, capabilities and resources are distributed.
Introduction
1(9)
Background
1(3)
Research Questions
4(1)
Approach
5(1)
Outline
6(3)
Agent Organization Framework
9(34)
Introduction
9(2)
Building Blocks of Agent Organizational models
11(7)
Concepts
12(3)
Organizational Relations
15(1)
Coordination Mechanisms
16(2)
Organizational Structures
18(3)
Machine Bureaucracy
18(1)
Professional Bureaucracy
19(1)
Adhocracy
20(1)
Agent Organizational Design Activities
21(2)
Task Analysis
21(1)
Operator Collaboration Design
22(1)
Organizational Design
22(1)
Agent-Based Supply Chain Management
23(14)
Task Analysis
23(2)
Operator Collaboration Design
25(1)
Organizational Design
26(7)
Implementation
33(3)
Results
36(1)
Discussion
37(6)
Coordination Strategies for Multi-Agent Systems
43(32)
Introduction
43(2)
Coordination as Problem-Solving
45(4)
Coordination Task
45(2)
Task-Method Ontology
47(2)
Coordination Strategy Methods
49(13)
Coordination by Direct Supervision
50(5)
Coordination by Standardization of Work
55(4)
Mutual Adjustment
59(3)
Implication for External Agent Design
62(3)
Operator Agent Behavior
63(1)
Manager Agent Behavior
64(1)
Mini experiments
65(7)
Direct Supervision
65(2)
Standardization of Work
67(1)
Mutual Adjustment
68(1)
Evaluation
68(4)
Discussion
72(3)
Five Capabilities Model
75(24)
Introduction
75(1)
The Five Dimensions
76(7)
Competence Model
77(1)
Communication Model
78(1)
Self Model
79(1)
Planner Model
80(1)
Environment Model
81(2)
The 5C Architecture
83(1)
International Insurance Traffic
84(11)
Approach
86(1)
Green Card Traffic
87(2)
Agent Collaboration
89(1)
Interface To The Back-Office System
89(1)
The Kir System
90(2)
Operationalization
92(2)
Extension
94(1)
Evaluation
94(1)
Discussion
95(4)
Interoperation within a Complex Multi-Agent Architecture
99(40)
Introduction
99(2)
IBROW Approach
101(1)
Agent Architecture
102(6)
User Space
103(1)
Broker Space
104(1)
Execution Space
105(3)
Levels of Interoperability
108(9)
Technical Interoperability
109(1)
Syntactic Interoperability
109(1)
Semantic Interoperability
110(3)
Coordination Interoperability
113(4)
Implementation
117(12)
Technology Set
118(2)
Agent Implementation
120(3)
Agent Log
123(3)
Inspection Tools
126(3)
Classification of Conference Submissions
129(6)
Brokering
130(1)
Execution
131(4)
Discussion
135(4)
Message Content Ontologies
139(40)
Introduction
139(1)
Ontologies in a Nutshell
140(2)
Message Content Ontology Framework
142(16)
Agent Communication Meta Ontology
143(1)
Reference Model
143(6)
Message Content Ontology
149(2)
Message Content Ontology Creation
151(4)
Message Content Ontology Application
155(3)
Agent Design
158(1)
Operationalization of Ontology-based Communication
158(12)
Message Content Ontology Implementation
159(8)
Message Content Ontology Application
167(2)
Application of Bean Generator
169(1)
Legal Advisor
170(6)
Architecture
170(3)
Message Content Ontology Design
173(1)
Simple Scenario
174(2)
Evaluation
176(1)
Discussion
176(3)
Conclusions
179(8)
Application of Organizational Decomposition Principles and Coordination in Multi-Agent Systems
179(1)
Coordination Mechanisms for Multi-Agent Systems
180(3)
Agent Design Principles
183(1)
Discussion and Future Research
184(3)
Summary 187(4)
Bibliography 191