Generative communication in Linda
ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems (TOPLAS)
Coordination languages and their significance
Communications of the ACM
The interdisciplinary study of coordination
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Coordination models and languages as software integrators
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Socialware: multiagent systems for supporting network communities
Communications of the ACM
On the expressive power of a language for programming coordination media
SAC '98 Proceedings of the 1998 ACM symposium on Applied Computing
MAAMAW '99 Proceedings of the 9th European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World: MultiAgent System Engineering
Proceedings of the First International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
COORDINATION '96 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
COORDINATION '97 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
COORDINATION '99 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
Designing Multi-agent Systems around an Extensible Communication Abstraction
Selected papers from the ESPRIT Project ModelAge Final Workshop on Formal Models of Agents
MAAMAW '99 Proceedings of the 9th European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World: MultiAgent System Engineering
Agent-Oriented Software Engineering
MAAMAW '99 Proceedings of the 9th European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World: MultiAgent System Engineering
Programmable Coordination Media
COORDINATION '97 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
Multiagent System Engineering: The Coordination Viewpoint
ATAL '99 6th International Workshop on Intelligent Agents VI, Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages (ATAL),
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Internet-based multi-agent systems call for new metaphors, abstractions, methodologies and enabling technologies specifically tailored to agent-oriented engineering. While coordination models define the framework to manage the space of agent interaction, ruling social behaviours and accomplishing social tasks, their impact on system design and development calls for an effective coordination technology. This paper presents LuCe, a coordination technology that integrates Java, Prolog and the notion of logic tuple centre, a programmable coordination medium, into a coherent framework. The power of the LuCe coordination technology is first discussed in general, then shown in the context of a simple yet significant system: a TicTacToe game among intelligent software agents and human players on the Internet.