Artificial Intelligence
Readings in agents
Readings in agents
Formal methods in DAI: logic-based representation and reasoning
Multiagent systems
IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
Agent architectures for flexible, practical teamwork
AAAI'97/IAAI'97 Proceedings of the fourteenth national conference on artificial intelligence and ninth conference on Innovative applications of artificial intelligence
An agent architecture for long-term robustness
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 3
Embodied cognition: a field guide
Artificial Intelligence
An intelligent proactive security system for cyber centres using Cognitive Agents
International Journal of Information and Computer Security
Cognitive agents based authentication & privacy scheme for mobile transactions (CABAPS)
Computer Communications
Applying possibility and belief operators to conditional statements
KES'10 Proceedings of the 14th international conference on Knowledge-based and intelligent information and engineering systems: Part I
Conditional statements grounded in past, present and future
ICCCI'10 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Computational collective intelligence: technologies and applications - Volume Part III
Grounding two notions of uncertainty in modal conditional statements
ACIIDS'11 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Intelligent information and database systems - Volume Part I
Modelling relationship between antecedent and consequent in modal conditional statements
ICCCI'11 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Computational collective intelligence: technologies and applications - Volume Part II
Intentional agency framework based on cognitive concepts to realize adaptive system management
ICNC'06 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Advances in Natural Computation - Volume Part II
Cognitive Agent Based Critical Information Gathering and Dissemination in Vehicular Ad hoc Networks
Wireless Personal Communications: An International Journal
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Several researchers have proposed using cognitive concepts as a semantic basis for agent communications (M.N. Huhns and M.P. Singh, 1997). One of the leading candidates for such a semantics is based on Arcol, the communication language used within Artimis. Interestingly, this application (not only of Arcol, but also in general) appears extremely misguided. The intentional concepts are well suited to designing agents, but are not suited to giving a basis to a public, standardizable view of communication. A challenge for using the cognitive concepts is that although they are natural in several respects and can guide implementations, full blown implementations that try to be faithful to every aspect of the model can end up being computationally demanding. As the cognitive concepts are put to use in real applications, the principles for simplifying the implementations will emerge. In any case, because of their naturalness to humans, the cognitive concepts are here to stay, and we will do well to consider them in the design of our agents