Changes for page Products

From version 156.1
edited by Andrea Omicini
on 10/08/2021 17:39
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 164.1
edited by Andrea Omicini
on 05/11/2021 17:09
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

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1 -Products
1 +#if($xcontext.language=="it")Prodotti#{else}Products#end
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1 -{{include document="Main.MacroSheet"/}}{{velocity}}
1 +{{include reference="Main.MacroSheet"/}}{{velocity}}
2 2  >Academic activities often result in //products// that can be shared and freely used, consisting mainly of software //technologies// — programming languages and frameworks, software infrastructures — but also including //methodologies// for the engineering of complex computational systems.
3 3  >Below, the current list of products actively supported, ordered alphabetically.
4 4  
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6 6  
7 7  {{id name='alchemist'/}}
8 8  == #alchemist() ==
9 -|[[image:Alchemist.WebHome@logo.svg||width='100']]|(((
9 +|[[image:Alchemist.WebHome@logo.svg||width='100em']]|(((
10 10  #alchemist() is a simulation framework offering both high performance and flexibility. Alchemist tries to get the best from ABMs and stochastic simulators and build an hybrid
11 11  )))(((
12 12  **Space**: [[#alchemist() Home>>Alchemist.WebHome]]
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15 15  
16 16  {{id name='arg2p'/}}
17 17  == {{arg2p/}} ==
18 -|[[image:Arg2p.WebHome@Arg2P-logo.png||width='100']]|(((
18 +|[[image:Arg2p.WebHome@Arg2P-logo.png||width='100em']]|(((
19 19  {{arg2p/}} (short for {{argtuprolog/}}) is a logic-based agreement framework enabling defeasible reasoning in intelligent systems
20 20  )))(((
21 21  **Space**: [[{{arg2p/}} Home>>Arg2p.WebHome]]
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24 24  
25 25  {{id name='aloo'/}}
26 26  == ALOO ==
27 -|[[image:aloo256x256.jpg||width='400']]|(((
27 +|[[image:aloo256x256.jpg||width='400em']]|(((
28 28  ALOO is a general-purpose concurrent programming language based on objects and agents as first-class abstractions. It is a Concurrent OOP language where concurrency aspects (parallelisms, asynchronous programming, etc) are modeled in terms of agent-oriented abstractions. Or, it can be conceived as an Agent-Oriented Programming language not based on logic programming - like state-of-the-art AOP languages - but on OOP. The language comes with a platform (compiler, runtime) and an Eclipse-based IDE.
29 29  ALOO is the most recent evolution of the simpAL project.
30 30  )))(((
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44 44  
45 45  {{id name='homemanager'/}}
46 46  == #hm() ==
47 -|[[image:Products.HomeManager@logoHM2.jpg||width='250']]|(((
47 +|[[image:Products.HomeManager@logoHM2.jpg||width='250em']]|(((
48 48  #hm() is a prototype agent-based platform for the construction of Socio-Technical Smart Spaces and Smart Environments, starting from the control of an intelligent home to a wider Smart Living scenario, where home users are situated in space and time in the surrounding environment.
49 49  The house is seen as an intelligent environment made of independent devices that participate to an agent society: following the Butlers vision and architecture, Home Manager aims both to enable a rich interaction experience for the user in the interaction with the smart house, and to anticipate his/her needs based both on the user's habits and policies, while respecting the general system policies which capture the global goals and constraints.
50 50  The implementation is Java-based, developed on top of the TuCSoN agent infrastructure, and deployable also on low-cost devices such as Raspberry PI2.
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53 53  **Contact**: [[Roberta Calegari>>RobertaCalegari.WebHome]]
54 54  )))
55 55  
56 +{{id name='lpaas'/}}
57 +== #lpaas() ==
58 +|[[image:LPaaS.WebHome@2P-LPaaS.png||width='600em']]|(((
59 +#lpaas() (short for #lpaasfull()) is a logic-based agreement framework enabling defeasible reasoning in intelligent systemsLogic Programming as a Service (LPaaS) is an evolution of the logic programming (LP) paradigm for intelligent IoT. It is a logic-based, service-oriented approach for distributed situated intelligence, conceived and designed as the natural evolution of LP in nowadays pervasive computing systems. Its purpose is to enable situated reasoning via explicit definition of the spatial-temporal structure of the environment where situated entities act and interact.
60 +)))(((
61 +**Space**: [[#lpaas() Home>>LPaaS.WebHome]]
62 +**Contact**: [[Roberta Calegari>>RobertaCalegari.WebHome]]
63 +
64 +)))
65 +
66 +
56 56  {{id name='mok'/}}
57 57  == #moklong() ==
58 -|[[image:MoK.WebHome@mok-logo.png||width="200"]]|(((
69 +|[[image:MoK.WebHome@mok-logo.png||width="200em"]]|(((
59 59  #moklong() (#mok() for short) is a model for knowledge self-organisation, exploiting the biochemical metaphor for its basic abstractions, and biochemical coordination as its coordination model.
60 60  )))(((
61 61  **Space**: [[#mok() Home>>MoK.WebHome]]
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85 85  
86 86  {{id name='respect'/}}
87 87  == #respect() ==
88 -|[[image:ReSpecT.WebHome@r!_logo.png||width="400"]]|(((
99 +|[[image:ReSpecT.WebHome@r!_logo.png||width="400em"]]|(((
89 89  #respect() is a logic-based coordination language both to define the behaviour of tuple centres and to coordinate software agents. #respect() assumes a tuple-based coordination model, where communication is based on logic tuples, and the behaviour of the coordination media in response to communication events is not fixed once and for all by the coordination model, but can be defined and tailored according to system's global requirements. According to this conceptual framework, #respect() has a twofold role:
90 90  * as a specification language - #respect() makes it possible to filter communication events and associate them to reactions by means of first-order logic tuples.
91 91  * as a reaction language - #respect() supports the notion of reaction as a computational activity to be executed locally to a tuple centre in response to communication events, by providing for both a logic-based syntax for the definition of reactions, and a model for their execution.
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96 96  
97 97  {{id name='simpa'/}}
98 98  == #simpa() ==
99 -|[[image:SimpA.WebHome@simpa-logo.jpg||width="400"]]|(((
110 +|[[image:SimpA.WebHome@simpa-logo.jpg||width="250em"]]|(((
100 100  #simpa() is a framework extending the basic Java environment with an agent-oriented abstraction layer for programming complex (concurrent in particular) applications.
101 101  
102 102  #simpa() is based on the #aea() (Agents and Artifacts) programming model, which introduces high-level metaphors taken from human society, namely agents - analogous to humans, as executors of activities and activities — and artifacts — analogous of the objects, resources, tools that are dynamically constructed, used, manipulated by humans to support / realise their individual and social activities.
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116 116  
117 117  {{id name='soda'/}}
118 118  == #soda() ==
119 -|[[image:SODA.WebHome@soda-logo.png||width="200"]]|(((
130 +|[[image:SODA.WebHome@soda-logo.png||width="200em"]]|(((
120 120  #soda() (Societies in Open and Distributed Agent spaces) is a methodology for the analysis and design of complex agent-based systems. #soda() is not concerned with //intra-agent issues//: designing a multi-agent system with #soda() leads to defining agents in terms of their required observable behaviour and their role in the multi-agent system.
121 121  Instead, #soda() concentrated on //inter-agent// issues, like the engineering of societies and infrastructures for multi-agent systems.
122 122  Recently a new and extended version of the methodology has been proposed, which takes into account both the Agents and Aartifacts (#aea()) meta-model, and a mechanism to manage the complexity of system description.
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127 127  
128 128  {{id name='traumatracker'/}}
129 129  == #traumatracker() ==
130 -|[[image:TraumaTracker.WebHome@TT-logo.png||width="500"]]|(((
141 +|[[image:TraumaTracker.WebHome@TT-logo.png||width="500em"]]|(((
131 131  Developed in collaboration with the Trauma Center and the Emergency Department of the "Bufalini" Hospital in Cesena, Italy, #traumatracker() is a project in which agent technologies are exploited to realise Personal Medical Digital Assistant Agents (PMDA) supporting a Trauma Team in trauma management operations. This project aims at exploring the fruitful integration of software personal agents with wearable/eyewear computing, based on mobile and wearable devices such as smart-glasses.
132 132  
133 133  The key functionality of #traumatracker() is to keep track of relevant events occurring during the management of a trauma, for two basic purposes. The first one is about tracking, i.e. to have an accurate documentation of the trauma, to automate the creation (and management) of reports and to enable offlne data analysis. The second one is a first kind of assistance, in terms of the real-time generation of warnings and suggestions to be perceived through the smartglasses, by analysing and reasoning upon the tracked events and data. The system has been designed and developed using cognitive agent technologies based on the Belief-Desire-Intention (BDI) architecture, as supported by the JaCaMo agent platform.
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138 138  
139 139  {{id name='tucson'/}}
140 140  == #tucson() ==
141 -|[[image:TuCSoN.WebHome@tucson.jpg||width="200"]]|(((
152 +|[[image:TuCSoN.WebHome@tucson.jpg||width="200em"]]|(((
142 142  #tucson() (Tuple Centres over the Network) is a model (and related infrastructure and technology) for the coordination of Internet agents.
143 143  
144 144  #tucson() exploits a notion of local tuple-based interaction space, called tuple centre, which is a tuple space enhanced with the notion of behaviour specification.
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154 154  
155 155  == #tuprolog() ==
156 156  {{id name='tuprolog'/}}
157 -|[[image:Tuprolog.WebHome@2p-logo.png||width="400"]]|(((
168 +|[[image:Tuprolog.WebHome@2p-logo.png||width="400em"]]|(((
158 158  #tuprolog() is a Java-based light-weight Prolog for Internet applications and infrastructures. For this purpose, #tuprolog() is designed to feature some interesting qualities: it is //easily deployable//, just requiring the presence of a Java VM and an invocation upon a single JAR file; its core is both //minimal//, taking the form of a tiny Java object containing only the most essential properties of a Prolog engine, and //configurable//, thanks to the loading and unloading of predicates, functors and operators embedded in libraries; the //integration between Prolog and Java// is as wide, deep, clean as possible; finally, //interoperability// is developed along the two main lines of Internet standard patterns and coordination models.
159 159  )))(((
160 160  **Space**: [[{{tuprolog/}} Home>>Tuprolog.WebHome]]