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Agent-based architectural framework enhancing configurability, autonomy and scalability of context-aware pervasive services
Author(s) -
N. Dimakis,
John Soldatos,
Lazaros Polymenakos,
Axel Bürkle,
Uwe Pfirrmann,
Gerhard Sutschet
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
autonomous agents and multi-agent systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.432
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1573-7454
pISSN - 1387-2532
DOI - 10.1007/s10458-009-9101-1
Subject(s) - computer science , scalability , flexibility (engineering) , exploit , interfacing , context (archaeology) , ubiquitous computing , implementation , variety (cybernetics) , architecture , popularity , software architecture , architecture framework , software engineering , human–computer interaction , software , computer security , database , operating system , artificial intelligence , paleontology , mathematics , biology , social psychology , psychology , statistics , visual arts , computer hardware , art
Multi-agent software architectures have gained in popularity due to their beneficial behavior in designing and implementing sophisticated applications. However, current approaches in implementing such architectures have led to application-specific, non-scalable implementations which limit the reusablity and improvement of the whole architecture. Moreover, these attempts lack features to enhance the user experience, thus slowing the adoption of the resulting services. In this paper we describe a fully-fledged multi-agent architecture covering a large variety of preferred features including capabilities of 'plugging' ubiquitous services, servicing mobile users, interconnecting remote similar architectures and interfacing with advanced software components such as knowledge bases. This framework exploits a wide-range of context-aware components making it essentially context-aware, allowing for the development of ubiquitous context-aware human-centric services, which are the focus of our research. To illustrate the flexibility of this architectural framework, we present four services which were built using this architectural paradigm by different development teams and elaborate on their overall behavior

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