Towards a theory of declarative knowledge
Foundations of deductive databases and logic programming
Model checking
An open agent architecture for assisting elder independence
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 2
Dynamics of a Classical Conditioning Model
Autonomous Robots
A temporal-interactivist perspective on the dynamics of mental states
Cognitive Systems Research
BI'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Brain informatics
Abstraction relations between internal and behavioural agent models for collective decision making
ICCCI'10 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Computational collective intelligence: technologies and applications - Volume PartI
Existential rigidity and many modalities in order-sorted logic
Knowledge-Based Systems
Specification of interlevel relations for agent models in multiple abstraction dimensions
IEA/AIE'11 Proceedings of the 24th international conference on Industrial engineering and other applications of applied intelligent systems conference on Modern approaches in applied intelligence - Volume Part II
Abstraction relations between internal and behavioural agent models for collective decision making
Web Intelligence and Agent Systems
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From an external perspective, cognitive agent behaviour can be described by specifying (temporal) correlations of a certain complexity between stimuli (input states) and (re)actions (output states) of the agent. From an internal perspective the agent’s dynamics can be characterized by direct (causal) temporal relations between internal cognitive states of the agent. Internal dynamics and externally observable behaviour of an agent have reciprocal relations with each other. This paper contributes an approach that allows automatic generation of a behavioural specification of an agent from a cognitive process model. Furthermore, by this automated transformation, internal cognitive state properties of an agent can be related by a representation relation to externally observable behavioural patterns.