Coordination infrastructures have played a central role in the engineering of multi-agent systems (MAS). Although MAS research has produced a number of notable coordination infrastructures of varying features, these have been mainly conceived to host software agents and to facilitate multi-agent programming. Thus, human agents have been mostly kept out of the picture, hence hindering the use of agent-oriented infrastructures for the coordination of hybrid multi-agent systems. Moreover, current MAS tools supporting coordination heavily rely on a dedicated infrastructure. In this work we touch upon these two issues. On the one hand, we analyse the kind of coordination support required by humans in a hybrid multi-agent system. On the other hand, we propose how to achieve coordination with little, lightweight infrastructure.
Links:
[1] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/individual/marc-esteva
[2] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/individual/juan-a-rodriguez-aguilar
[3] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/individual/josep-lluis-arcos
[4] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/individual/carles-sierra
[5] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/publications/export/tagged/4320
[6] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/publications/export/xml/4320
[7] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/publications/export/bib/4320
[8] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/project/at
[9] http://www.iiia.csic.es/en/project/eve