Statecharts: A visual formalism for complex systems
Science of Computer Programming
Object-oriented software engineering
Object-oriented software engineering
ECAI-94 Proceedings of the workshop on agent theories, architectures, and languages on Intelligent agents
A methodology and modelling technique for systems of BDI agents
MAAMAW '96 Proceedings of the 7th European workshop on Modelling autonomous agents in a multi-agent world : agents breaking away: agents breaking away
Guiding Goal Modeling Using Scenarios
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
A methodology for agent-oriented analysis and design
Proceedings of the third annual conference on Autonomous Agents
Constructing Intelligent Agents with Java: A Programmer's Guide to Smarter Applications
Constructing Intelligent Agents with Java: A Programmer's Guide to Smarter Applications
The Psychology of Human-Computer Interaction
The Psychology of Human-Computer Interaction
ITS '96 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Intelligent Tutoring Systems
Analysis and Design of Multiagent Systems Using MAS-Common KADS
ATAL '97 Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Intelligent Agents IV, Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages
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This paper describes a method of multi-agent analysis and design for reactive, real-time information systems, relating to complex and risk-bearing applications. The fundamental principle consists of using a series of models in "cascade" to shift from an abstract representation of the problems to a formal one of the directly programmable agent (in Java for example). The first basic idea is not to have fixed goals or tasks, but rather for them to be gradually released from the analysis of the interactions between the actors (human or artifacts). The second idea, aims at integrating the space-time constraints according to an individual and collective point of view in a concurrent way. The last one, proposes neither to process on a hierarchical basis nor to laminate the final architecture of the interactions between agents but to, on the contrary define the acquaintance rules and their evolution according to the context. This paper details the various stages of this approach and compares them with other current work.