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Multi-agent systems research into the 21st century

  • Mark D'Inverno
  • , Michael Luck
  • , C. Boutilier
  • , C. Sierra
  • , S. Chong
  • , K. Liu
  • , A. Bazzan
  • , R. Bordini
  • , G. Andrioti
  • , R. Vicari
  • , J. Wahle
  • , M. Beer
  • , I. Anderson
  • , W. Huang
  • , M. Fisher
  • , C. Ghidini
  • , M. Schut
  • , M. Wooldridge
  • , S. Fatima
  • , C. Dixon
  • M. Fisher, A. Bolotov, W. De Vries, W. Van der Hoek, J. J. Meyer, F. De Boer, T. Norman, C. Reed, C. Preist, C. Bartolini, I. Phillips, S. Poslad, P. Buckle, R. Hadingham, J. Bigham, L. Tokarchuk, L. Cuthbert, R. Ashri, M. Luck, M. Wooldridge, A. Lomuscio, K. Clark, P. Robinson, J. Doran, O. Rana, L. Moreau, U. Hustadt, C. Dixon, R. Schmidt, J. J. Meyer, UKMAS 2001 Contributors

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

There is little doubt that the strength and breadth of UK research into multi-agent systems continues to grow as we move into the new millennium. In the middle of an extremely cold December in 2000, the Third UK Workshop on Multi-Agent Systems (UKMAS 2001) was held at St Catherine's College, Oxford. This was the fifth such meeting in as many years, generously sponsored by EPSRC, FIPA (The Foundation for Intelligent Physical Agents) and Hewlett Packard.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)271-275
Number of pages6
JournalKnowledge Engineering Review
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2001

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