Brahms: simulating practice for work systems design
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
"It's not just goals all the way down" - "it's activities all the way down"
ESAW'06 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Engineering societies in the agents world VII
Simulating activities: Relating motives, deliberation, and attentive coordination
Cognitive Systems Research
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There is increasing interest in developing "day in the life" models and simulations of people's behavior, the interaction between groups of people and systems, as well as movement and interaction within the environment. Cognitive modeling tools (e.g. SOAR, ACT-R) focus on detailed modeling of individual cognitive tasks at the sub-second level. In contrast, Brahms enables multi-agent activity modeling, focusing on higher-abstraction behaviors at the second and longer timeframe. Activity modeling enables modeling the behaviors of individuals and groups (located and situated), how and where communication and synchronization happens, and how people and machines work together to accomplish goals. This tutorial will provide an overview of the Brahms multi- agent activity modeling language by considering a simple day in the life scenario, including hands-on experience with Brahms.