The objective of this document(*)
is to provide some rational, structured access to an analysis of cognitive and agent architectures (for
more information on accessing the document, see the Reader's Guide). Twelve architectures have
been used for this preliminary analysis representing a wide range of
current architectures in artificial
intelligence (AI). The aim of the project is to facilitate both
an understanding of current architectures and provide insight to the
development of future, improved intelligent agent architectures.
This work was based on publications from 1992 and before and has not
been authorized by the researchers responsible for particular
architectures (see DISCLAIMER for additional
information).
Y. Mor, and J. Rosenschein. Proceedings of the First International Conference on Multiagent Systems (ICMAS95), page 276-282. Menlo park, California, AAAI Press / MIT Press, (1995)
E. Yu. RE '97: Proceedings of the 3rd IEEE International Symposium on Requirements Engineering (RE'97), page 226--235. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (1997)
M. Balmer, N. Cetin, K. Nagel, and B. Raney. Proceedings of the Third International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems - Volume 1, page 60--67. New York, New York, IEEE Computer Society, (2004)
K. Williams, and S. Williams. Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary
Computation Conference, 2, page 1429--1436. Orlando, Florida, USA, Morgan Kaufmann, (13-17 July 1999)
H. Mouratidis, P. Giorgini, I. Philp, and G. Manson. Proceedings of the Workshop on Agent Oriented Information Systems AOIS 2002 during CAiSE'02, Toronto, Canada, (2002)
S. Cranefield, and M. Winikoff. Coordination, Organizations, Institutions and Norms in Agent Systems IV, volume 5428 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg, (2009)