Abstract
This is a short overview of research in multi-agent systems within our research group at Stanford University, knobotics. We discuss research that centers around the formal ascription of mental attitudes to computational entities, the framework of agent oriented programming (AOP), and distributed coordination mechanisms.
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
R. I. Brafman, J.-C. Latombe, and Y. Shoham. Towards Knowledge-Level Analysis of Motion Planning. Proc. AAAI, Washington, 1993.
R. I. Brafman, J.-C. Latombe, Y. Moses, and Y. Shoham. Knowledge as a tool in motion planning under uncertainty. Proc. TARK, 1993.
A. del Val and Y. Shoham. Belief update and theories of action. Journal of Logic, Language and Information, 1994 (to appear).
A. del Val and Y. Shoham. A unified view of belief revision and update. Journal of Logic and Computation, 1994 (to appear).
H. Isozaki and Y. Shoham. A mechanism for reasoning about time and belief. In Proc. Conference on Fifth Generation Computer Systems, Japan, 1992.
F. Lin and Y. Shoham. Provably correct theories of action (preliminary report). In Proc. NCAI, Anaheim, CA, 1991.
F. Lin and Y. Shoham. Concurrent actions in the situation calculus. Stanford working document, 1992.
Y. Moses and Y. Shoham. Belief as Defeasible Knowledge. Journal of Artificial Intelligence, 1993 (to appear).
P. Lamarre and Y. Shoham. Knowledge, certainty, belief, and conditionalisation. Proc. KR, Bonn, 1994.
Y. Shoham. Agent Oriented Programming. Journal of Artificial Intelligence. 60(1), pp. 51–92, 1993.
Y. Shoham and M. Tennenholtz. Computational Social Systems: offline design. Journal of Artificial Intelligence, 1994 (to appear).
Emergent conventions in multi-Agent systems. Proc. KR, Boston, 1992.
Co-learning and evolution of social conventions. Stanford University Technical Report.
Belief ascription and mental-level modelling. Proc. KR, Bonn, 1994.
The impact of locality and authority on the emergence of conventions. Proc. AAAI, Seattle, 1994.
B. Thomas. A logic for representing action, belief, capability, and intention, 1992. Stanford working document.
M. Torrance. The AGENTO programming manual, 1991. Stanford technical report.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 1994 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Shoham, Y. (1994). Multi-agent research in the knobotics group. In: Castelfranchi, C., Werner, E. (eds) Artificial Social Systems. MAAMAW 1992. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 830. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-58266-5_15
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-58266-5_15
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-58266-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-48589-6
eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive