ON THE ROLE OF BDI MODELING FOR INTEGRATED CONTROL AND COORDINATED BEHAVIOR IN AUTONOMOUS AGENTS
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Applied Artificial Intelligence
- Vol. 9 (4) , 421-447
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08839519508945483
Abstract
This paper describes an architecture for controlling and coordinating autonomous agents, building on previous work addressing reactive and deliberative control methods. The proposed multilayered hybrid architecture allows a rationally bounded, goal-directed agent to reason predictively about potential conflicts by constructing knowledge level models that explain other agents' observed behaviors and hypothesize their beliefs, desires, and intentions; at the same time, it enables the agent to operate autonomously, to react promptly to changes in its real-time environment, and to coordinate its actions effectively with other agents. A principal aim of this research is to understand the role dzfferent functional capabilities play in constraining an agent5 behavior under varying environmental conditions. To this end, an experimental test bed has been constructed comprising a simulated multi-agent world in which a variety of agent configurations and behaviors have been investigated. A number of experimentalfindings are reported.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Modeling Adaptive Autonomous AgentsArtificial Life, 1993
- Agent-oriented programmingArtificial Intelligence, 1993
- Competitive agents for information filteringCommunications of the ACM, 1992
- Today the earwig, tomorrow man?Artificial Intelligence, 1991
- Situated agents can have goalsRobotics and Autonomous Systems, 1990
- A basic agentComputational Intelligence, 1990
- Plans and resource‐bounded practical reasoningComputational Intelligence, 1988
- Model-based Reasoning: TroubleshootingPublished by Elsevier ,1988
- Theorist: A Logical Reasoning System for Defaults and DiagnosisPublished by Springer Nature ,1987