Using ontologies to formalize services specifications in multi-agent systems

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Abstract

One key issue in multi-agent systems (MAS) is their ability to interact and exchange information autonomously across applications. To secure agent interoperability, designers must rely on a communication protocol that allows software agents to exchange meaningful information. In this paper we propose using ontologies as such communication protocol. Ontologies capture the semantics of the operations and services provided by agents, allowing inter-operability and information exchange in a MAS. Ontologies are a formal, machine processable, representation that allows to capture the semantics of a domain and, to derive meaningful information by way of logical inference. In our proposal we use a formal knowledge representation language (OWL) that translates into Description Logics (a subset of first order logic), thus eliminating ambiguities and providing a solid base for machine based inference. The main contribution of this approach is to make the requirements explicit, centralize the specification in a single document (the ontology itself), at the same that it provides a formal, unambigous representation that can be processed by automated inference machines. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005.

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APA

Breitman, K. K., Filho, A. H., Haeusler, E. H., & Von Staa, A. (2004). Using ontologies to formalize services specifications in multi-agent systems. In Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (Subseries of Lecture Notes in Computer Science) (Vol. 3228, pp. 92–110). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-30960-4_7

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