Sociological agents for effective social action

Mark D'Inverno, Michael Luck

Research output: Chapter in book/report/conference proceedingConference proceedingpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper is concerned with the problem of how effective social interaction arises from individual social action and mind. The need to study the individual social mind suggests a move towards the notion of sociological agents who can model their social environment, as opposed to acting socially within it. This does not constrain such social behaviour; on the contrary, we argue that it provides the requisite information and understanding for such behaviour to be effective. We argue that effective social agents must be sociological in modelling agents and agent relationships. In this paper, we show how an existing agent framework leads naturally to the enumeration of a map of inter-agent relationships that can be modelled and exploited by sociological agents to enable more effective operation.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings - 4th International Conference on MultiAgent Systems, ICMAS 2000
PublisherIEEE
Pages379-380
Number of pages2
ISBN (Electronic)9780769506258
ISBN (Print)0769506259
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Jul 2000
Event4th International Conference on MultiAgent Systems, ICMAS 2000 - Boston, United States
Duration: 10 Jul 200012 Jul 2000
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/conhome/6917/proceeding (Conference Proceedings)

Publication series

NameProceedings - International Conference on Multi Agent Systems, ICMAS

Conference

Conference4th International Conference on MultiAgent Systems, ICMAS 2000
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityBoston
Period10/07/0012/07/00
Internet address

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