Dan C. Marinescu, Craig Lee (eds.)
Process Coordination and Ubiquitous Computing, chapter 12, pages 187–200
CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, USA
October 2002
On the one hand, recent studies on the history of human societies suggest that the role of the environment has to be taken explicitly into account in order to understand evolution of individuals and groups in any non-trivial setting. On the other hand, the notion of context is well-known and relevant to several research areas such as natural language, philosophy, logic, and artificial intelligence. In these areas, contexts are typically used to model the effect of the environment (in its most general sense, including the spatial and temporal interpretation of the term) on the communication occurring amongst active entities, such as humans or artificial agents.
Generalising upon the recently introduced notion of context-dependent coordination, in this seminal paper we propose the notion of agent coordination context as a means to model and shape the space of agent interaction and communication. From a theoretical perspective, agent coordination contexts can serve the purposes of (i) enabling agents to model the environment where they interact and communicate (the subjective viewpoint), and (ii) providing a framework to express how the environment affects interpretation of agent communication acts (the objective viewpoint). From an engineering perspective, the notion of agent coordination context enables in principle agents to perceive the space where they act and interact, reason about the effect of their actions and communications, and possibly affect their environment to achieve their goals. Also, agent coordination contexts allow engineers to encapsulate rules for governing applications built as agent systems, mediate the interactions amongst agents and the environment, and possibly affect them so as to change global application behaviour incrementally and dynamically.
reference talk
origin event
funding project
NokiaMobileCoord — Coordination Technologies for Mobile Agents and Wireless Devices
(01/01/2002–31/12/2002)
works as
reference publication for talk