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ATAL
2003
Springer

Implementing responsibility for states and events

14 years 4 months ago
Implementing responsibility for states and events
Contracts in the real world often rest upon a notion of responsibility, by which parties commit to the fulfilment of particular imperatives embedded in the contract. Responsibility is not the same as direct action, nor commitment to such action: a canonical example is where imperatives are issued, in a particular context, to effect the delegation of responsibility. Furthermore, responsibility can range not only over particular activities, but also over particular states of the world. This paper first explains the problem of statebased and event-based responsibility, and then illustrates how this is operationalised in the NoA system through the use of an example. Categories and Subject Descriptors I.2.11 [Artificial Intelligence]: Distributed Artificial Intelligence—Multiagent systems, Coherence and coordination General Terms Agent Architecture
Martin J. Kollingbaum, Timothy J. Norman, Chris Re
Added 06 Jul 2010
Updated 06 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where ATAL
Authors Martin J. Kollingbaum, Timothy J. Norman, Chris Reed
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