ACM Home Page
Please provide us with feedback. Feedback
KODAMA project
Full text PdfPdf (84 KB)
Source International Conference on Autonomous Agents archive
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 1 table of contents
Bologna, Italy
SESSION: Session 1A: agent oriented software engineering table of contents
Pages: 43 - 44  
Year of Publication: 2002
ISBN:1-58113-480-0
Authors
Guoqiang Zhong  Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Keníchi Takahashi  Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Satoshi Amamiya  Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Tsunenori Mine  Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Makoto Amamiya  Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Sponsors
SIGART: ACM Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 4,   Downloads (12 Months): 15,   Citation Count: 0
Additional Information:

abstract   references   index terms   collaborative colleagues  

Tools and Actions: Request Permissions Request Permissions    Review this Article  
DOI Bookmark: Use this link to bookmark this Article: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/544741.544752
What is a DOI?

ABSTRACT

This paper describes the design and implementation of a worldwide distributed multi-agent system, called KODAMA (Kyushu University Open & Distributed Autonomous Multi-Agent). Historically, research on multi-agent systems is a natural extension of the evolution of programming, as well as communications and control technologies. Through our work on the KODAMA project, we concentrate on enabling technologies for building scalable, flexible and secure multi-agent systems, which can operate in a worldwide computing environment. The innovative points of KODAMA are the approaches it takes to formalizing a global distributed computing architecture based on agent-oriented programming. The core concept behind our design is a separation principle that mandates the separation of application-level logic from agent-level logic and the separation of agent-level logic from network-level logic. In this way, the inherent distribution and complexity that the worldwide computing environment involve can be abstracted, encapsulated and tackled appropriately at different levels . In line with the separation principle, this article gives a general introduction to the key abstraction models that form the basis of KODAMA.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
 
2
G. Zhong, S. Amamiya, K. Takahashi, T. Mine, and M. Amamiya. The design and implementation of KODAMA system. IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems, E85-D(4):637--646, 2002.

Collaborative Colleagues:
Guoqiang Zhong: colleagues
Keníchi Takahashi: colleagues
Satoshi Amamiya: colleagues
Tsunenori Mine: colleagues
Makoto Amamiya: colleagues