Multimedia: computing, communications and applications
Multimedia: computing, communications and applications
Fab: content-based, collaborative recommendation
Communications of the ACM
Recommendation as classification: using social and content-based information in recommendation
AAAI '98/IAAI '98 Proceedings of the fifteenth national/tenth conference on Artificial intelligence/Innovative applications of artificial intelligence
A Framework for Collaborative, Content-Based and Demographic Filtering
Artificial Intelligence Review - Special issue on data mining on the Internet
Experiences with MPEG-4 multimedia streaming
MULTIMEDIA '01 Proceedings of the ninth ACM international conference on Multimedia
Supporting nomadic agent-based applications in the FIPA agent architecture
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 3
Intelligent agents for QoS management
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 3
Introduction to Linear Optimization
Introduction to Linear Optimization
WCDMA for UMTS: Radio Access for Third Generation Mobile Communications
WCDMA for UMTS: Radio Access for Third Generation Mobile Communications
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
CIA '98 Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Cooperative Information Agents II, Learning, Mobility and Electronic Commerce for Information Discovery on the Internet
Intelligent agents: an emerging technology for next generation telecommunications?
INFOCOM'96 Proceedings of the Fifteenth annual joint conference of the IEEE computer and communications societies conference on The conference on computer communications - Volume 2
A method of ontologies merging based on rules
International Journal of Wireless and Mobile Computing
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In this paper, we propose WAQM, a novel XML-based multiagent system for Quality of Service (QoS) management in wireless networks. WAQM is characterised by the following features: (i) it handles a user profile and exploits it jointly with suitable network resource management techniques to maximise user satisfaction; (ii) it is semi-automatic; (iii) it exploits XML for guaranteeing a light, versatile and standard mechanism for information representation, storing and exchange. In this paper, the basic features of the system are discussed into detail. Furthermore, the main results of a performance evaluation study aiming at comparing it with alternative agent-based approaches for handling user access to telecommunications networks are reported.