An analysis of formal inter-agent dialogues
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 1
Games That Agents Play: A Formal Framework for Dialogues between Autonomous Agents
Journal of Logic, Language and Information
A Social Semantics for Agent Communication Languages
Issues in Agent Communication
Modeling Dialogues Using Argumentation
ICMAS '00 Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on MultiAgent Systems (ICMAS-2000)
DR-NEGOTIATE - A System for Automated Agent Negotiation with Defeasible Logic-Based Strategies
EEE '05 Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Conference on e-Technology, e-Commerce and e-Service (EEE'05) on e-Technology, e-Commerce and e-Service
A formal framework for agent interaction semantics
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
Using a performative subsumption lattice to support commitment-based conversations
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
What kind of argument are we going to have today?
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
A commitment-based communicative act library
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
Protocol synthesis with dialogue structure theory
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
A Synthesis Between Mental Attitudes and Social Commitments in Agent Communication Languages
IAT '05 Proceedings of the IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Intelligent Agent Technology
A lightweight coordination calculus for agent systems
DALT'04 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Declarative Agent Languages and Technologies
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We advance a model to express the preconditions for engaging in dialogues in terms of the agents' mental attitudes, in a defeasible logic context (beliefs are divided into strict and defeasible ones). Then, we give a protocol for the persuasion dialogue between two agents, which provides the means of identifying both false premises and logical fallacies. Communicative acts are organized in a hierarchy, and relations between speech acts and social commitments are expressed via policies involving operations on social commitments. Including commitments renders an observable behaviour of the communicating agents.