Anticipatory Coordination in Socio-technical Knowledge-intensive Environments: Behavioural Implicit Communication in MoK


Stefano Mariani, Andrea Omicini

Marco Gavanelli, Evelina Lamma, Fabrizio Riguzzi (eds.)
AI*IA 2015, Advances in Artificial Intelligence, pages 102-115
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence) 9336
Springer International Publishing
23-25 September 2015

Some of the most peculiar traits of socio-technical KIE (knowledge-intensive environments) — such as unpredictability of agents’ behaviour, ever-growing amount of information to manage, fast-paced production/consumption — tangle coordination of information, by affecting, e.g., reachability by knowledge prosumers and manageability by the IT infrastructure. Here, we propose a novel approach to coordination in KIE, by extending the MoK model for knowledge self-organisation with key concepts from the cognitive theory of BIC (behavioural implicit communication).

(keywords) coordination, socio-technical systems, MAS, behavioural implicit communication, MoK

Journals & Series

Events

  • XIV Conference of the Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence (AI*IA 2015) — 23/09/2015–25/09/2015

Publication

— authors

— editors

Marco Gavanelli, Evelina Lamma, Fabrizio Riguzzi

— status

published

— sort

paper in proceedings

— publication date

23-25 September 2015

— volume

AI*IA 2015, Advances in Artificial Intelligence

— series

Lecture Notes in Computer Science / Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence

— volume

9336

— pages

102-115

— number of pages

14

— location

Ferrara, Italy

URLs

original page

identifiers

— DOI

10.1007/978-3-319-24309-2_8

— IRIS

11585/521874

— Scopus

2-s2.0-84983421249

— WoS / ISI

000366191500008

— print ISSN

0302-9743

— print ISBN

978-3-319-24308-5

— online ISBN

978-3-319-24309-2

notes

— note

XIVth International Conference of the Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence, Ferrara, Italy, September 23–25, 2015, Proceedings

Partita IVA: 01131710376 — Copyright © 2008–2023 APICe@DISI – PRIVACY