Conferences in Research and Practice in Information Technology
  

Online Version - Last Updated - 20 Jan 2012

 

 
Home
 

 
Procedures and Resources for Authors

 
Information and Resources for Volume Editors
 

 
Orders and Subscriptions
 

 
Published Articles

 
Upcoming Volumes
 

 
Contact Us
 

 
Useful External Links
 

 
CRPIT Site Search
 
    

Information Systems as Distributed Multi-agent Systems

Purvis, M.

    With information systems increasingly distributed and embedded in real-world processes, it is becoming more difficult to arrive at consistent modelling representations that do justice to the complexity of these systems. Multi-agent system technology is currently being developed in a number of centres around the world to provide an open, flexible, and robust technological infrastructure to support such distributed information systems. We discuss the nature of this technology and some modelling approaches that can be used to represent and help develop these multi-agent systems. Though much of the work so far has been devoted to the representation of inter-agent message passing, we examine here more recent ideas concerning how the internal architecture of an agent can be generally represented and how the coordination and behaviour of multiple agents can be modelled and supported with matching infrastructural technology. This is presented in the context of and with examples from the Opal agent platform under development at the University of Otago.
Cite as: Purvis, M. (2005). Information Systems as Distributed Multi-agent Systems. In Proc. Second Asia-Pacific Conference on Conceptual Modelling (APCCM2005), Newcastle, Australia. CRPIT, 43. Hartmann, S. and Stumptner, M., Eds. ACS. 3.
pdf (from crpit.com) pdf (local if available) BibTeX EndNote GS
 

 

ACS Logo© Copyright Australian Computer Society Inc. 2001-2014.
Comments should be sent to the webmaster at crpit@scem.uws.edu.au.
This page last updated 16 Nov 2007