Reflection in an object-oriented concurrent language
OOPSLA '88 Conference proceedings on Object-oriented programming systems, languages and applications
Communications of the ACM
KQML as an agent communication language
CIKM '94 Proceedings of the third international conference on Information and knowledge management
Pitfalls of agent-oriented development
AGENTS '98 Proceedings of the second international conference on Autonomous agents
Authoritative sources in a hyperlinked environment
Proceedings of the ninth annual ACM-SIAM symposium on Discrete algorithms
Multi-Agent Systems: An Introduction to Distributed Artificial Intelligence
Multi-Agent Systems: An Introduction to Distributed Artificial Intelligence
JATLite: A Java Agent Infrastructure with Message Routing
IEEE Internet Computing
Agent Communication Languages: The Current Landscape
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Learning to Probabilistically Identify Authoritative Documents
ICML '00 Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference on Machine Learning
Using Colored Petri Nets for Conversation Modeling
Issues in Agent Communication
Topic-specific crawling on the web with the measurements of the relevancy context graph
Information Systems - Special issue: The semantic web and web services
Modeling user interests by conceptual clustering
Information Systems - Special issue: The semantic web and web services
Detours: binary interception of Win32 functions
WINSYM'99 Proceedings of the 3rd conference on USENIX Windows NT Symposium - Volume 3
An ambient software monitoring system for unsupervised user modelling
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Empirical analysis of predictive algorithms for collaborative filtering
UAI'98 Proceedings of the Fourteenth conference on Uncertainty in artificial intelligence
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
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Reliance on the Internet in the workplace means that manually monitoring compliance with an Acceptable Usage Policy (AUP) is impractical given the volumes of data generated. Therefore, for such a system to function effectively, the processing of vast audit trails obtained must be processed by automated means. This paper introduces the incorporation of a novel user-monitoring framework into the domain of software agents for large-scale auditing of Internet use with possible extensions to general network use. It is intended that such an approach would replace current ad-hoc methods such as those based on perusing server logs with a more accurate representation of user activity. The system described herein is an experimental multi-agent one provisionally known as WebEngzilla, which actively monitors and reports on the Web browsing behaviour habits of network users unifying an ambient client monitoring system with a distributed data mining back end.