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Conference

Intelligent Agents 

About: Intelligent Agents is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Intelligent agent & Multi-agent system. Over the lifetime, 559 publications have been published by the conference receiving 20949 citations.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
12 Aug 1996
TL;DR: This work proposes a formal definition of an autonomous agent which clearly distinguishes a software agent from just any program, and offers the beginnings of a natural kinds taxonomy of autonomous agents.
Abstract: The advent of software agents gave rise to much discussion of just what such an agent is, and of how they differ from programs in general. Here we propose a formal definition of an autonomous agent which clearly distinguishes a software agent from just any program. We also offer the beginnings of a natural kinds taxonomy of autonomous agents, and discuss possibilities for further classification. Finally, we discuss subagents and multiagent systems.

2,504 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Mar 1995
TL;DR: A survey of what the authors perceive to be the most important theoretical and practical issues associated with the design and construction of intelligent agents is presented.
Abstract: The concept of an agent has become important in both Artificial Intelligence (AI) and mainstream computer science. In this article, we present a survey of what we perceive to be the most important theoretical and practical issues associated with the design and construction of intelligent agents. The article also includes a short review of current and potential applications of agent technology, and closes with a glossary of key terms, an annotated list of systems, and a detailed bibliography. Pointers to further reading are provided throughout.

1,573 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 1997
TL;DR: How Kasbah works is described, a system where users create autonomous agents to buy and sell goods on their behalf and the implementation of a simple proof-of-concept prototype is discussed.
Abstract: While there are many Web services which help users find things to buy, we know of none which actually try to automate the process of buying and selling. Kasbah is a system where users create autonomous agents to buy and sell goods on their behalf. In this paper, we describe how Kasbah works. We also discuss the implementation of a simple proof-of-concept prototype.

901 citations

Book ChapterDOI
04 Jul 1998
TL;DR: Within the ATAL community, the belief-desire-intention (BDI) model has come to be possibly the best known and best studied model of practical reasoning agents.
Abstract: Within the ATAL community, the belief-desire-intention (BDI) model has come to be possibly the best known and best studied model of practical reasoning agents. There are several reasons for its success, but perhaps the most compelling are that the BDI model combines a respectable philosophical model of human practical reasoning, (originally developed by Michael Bratman [1]), a number of implementations (in the IRMA architecture [2] and the various PRS-like systems currently available [7]), several successful applications (including the now-famous fault diagnosis system for the space shuttle, as well as factory process control systems and business process management [8]), and finally, an elegant abstract logical semantics, which have been taken up and elaborated upon widely within the agent research community [14, 16].

611 citations

Book ChapterDOI
04 Jul 1998
TL;DR: The current agent-oriented methodologies are introduced and what approaches have been followed, the suitability of these approaches for agent modelling, and some conclusions drawn from the survey are discussed.
Abstract: This article introduces the current agent-oriented methodologies. It discusseswhat approacheshave been followed (mainly extending existing objectoriented and knowledge engineering methodologies), the suitability of these approaches for agent modelling, and some conclusions drawn from the survey.

475 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
20172
201615
20151
201428
20139
20122