Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions

"This volume addresses a variety of issues, in particular the emergence of societal phenomena in the interactions of systems of agents (software, robot or human)"--Provided by publisher.

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Datensatz im Suchindex

_version_ 1819672855363715072
adam_text Table of Contents Foreword ......................................................................................................................................................xv Preface ....... , ...............................................................................................................................................xvii Section I Initial States Chapter I The Science of Social Emergence ..................................................................................................................1 R. Keith Sawyer, Washington University in St. Louis, USA Chapter II Agent Cognitive Capabilities and Orders of Social Emergence ...................................................................17 Christopher Goldspink, Incept Labs, Australia Robert Kay, Incept Labs, Australia ét University of Technology, Sydney, Australia Chapter HI Agents and Social Interaction: Insighte from Social Psychoiogy .................................................................35 Joseph С BulUngton, Georgia Southern University, USA CiapterlV Predictive Models of Cultural Information Transmission ............................................................................ 5Î M Afeał Upał, Defence R&D, Canada Chapter ¥ Interaction of Agent in E-Business: A Look at Different Sources ................................................................60 Jorge A. Romero, Towson University, USA Section II Emergences CbapterW A SitMlattai of Temporally ¥агішй Agent interaction via Passive inquiry ...............................,................ 69 JdamJ. Conower, Towsom University, USA Chapter VU Agent Feedback Messaging: A Messaging Infrastructure for Distributed Message Delivery ......................84 Richard Schilling, Cognition Group, Inc., USA Chapter VIII Modeling Cognitive Agents for Social Systems and a Simulation in Urban Dynamics .............................104 Yu Zhang, Trinity University, USA Mark Lewis, Trinity University, USA Christine Drennon, Trinity University, USA Michael Pellón, Trinity University, USA Phil Coleman, Trinity University, USA Jason Leezer, Trinity University, USA Chapter IX Developing Relationships Between Autonomous Agents: Promoting Pro-Social Behaviour Through Virtual Learning Environments Part I ..........................................................................................125 Scott Watson, University of Hertfordshire, UK Kerstin Dautenhahn, University of Hertfordshire, UK Wan Ching (Steve) Ho, University of Hertfordshire, UK Rafal Dawidowicz, University of Hertfordshire, UK Chapter X Construction of Meanings in Biological and Artificial Agents ...................................................................139 Martin Takáč, Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia Chapter XI Training Coordination Proxy Agents Using Reinforcement Learning .......................................................158 Myriam Abramson, Naval Research Laboratory, USA Chapter XII The Generative Power of Signs: The Importance of the Autonomous Perception of Tags to the Strong Emergence of Institutions ......................................................................................................... 173 Deborah V.Duong, OSD/PAE Simulation Analysis Center, USA Chapter XIII Prepositional Logic Syntax Acquisition Using Induction and Self-Organisation ......................................185 Josefina Sierra, Universidad Politécnica de Cataluña, Spain Josefina Santìbànez, Universidad de La Rio] a, Spain Chapter XIV Hybrid Emotionally Aware Mediated Multiagency ................................................................................... 199 Giovanni Vìncenti, Gruppo Vincenti, Italy James Braman, Towson University , USA Chapter XV Mapping Hybrid Agencies Through Multiagent Systems. ..........................................................................215 Samuel G. Collins, Towson University, USA Goran Trajkovski, Laureate Education Inc., USA Section III Second Order Emergences Chapter XVI Developing Relationships Between Autonomous Agents: Promoting Pro-Social Behaviour Through Virtual Learning Environments, Part II .......................................................................................229 Scott Watson, University of Hertfordshire, UK Kerstin Dautenhahn, University of Hertfordshire, UK Wan Ching (Steve) Ho, University of Hertfordshire, UK Rafal Dawidowicz, University of Hertfordshire, UK Chapter XVII Reputation: Social Transmission for Partner Selection ..............................................................................243 Mario Paolucci, Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology/CNR, Italy Rosaría Conte, Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology/CNR, Italy Chapter XVIII A Simulation of Temporally Variant Agent Interaction via Belief Promulgation .......................................261 Adam J, Conaver, Towson University, USA Chapter XIX The Human Mirror Neuron System ............................................................................................................275 David B. Newlin, RTI International, USA Chapter XX Relationships Between the Processes of Emergence and Abstraction in Societies ....................................288 Erie Baumer, University of California, Irvine, USA Bill Tomlinson, University of California, Irvine, USA Chapter XXI Emergent Reasoning Structures in Law ............................,........................................................................305 Fern Ł Walker, Hofstra University, USA Chapter XXII Agents in Security: A Leek at the Use of Agents in Host-Based Monitoring and Protection and Netwerk Intrusion Detection ...............................................................................................................325 Theoder Richardson, South University, USA Chapter XXIII Search as a Tool for Emergence ..................................................................................................................341 Michael J. North, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Thomas R Howe, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Nick Collier, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & PantaRei Corporation, USA Eric Tatara, Argonne National Laboratory, USA Jonathan Ozik, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Charles Macal, Argonne National Laboratory, USA ά The University of Chicago, USA Compilation of References .......................................................................................................................364 About the Contributors ............................................................................................................................400 Index ...........................................................................................................................................................408 Detailed Table of Contents Foreword ......................................................................................................................................................xv Preface .......................................................................................................................................................xvii Section I Initial States Chapter I The Science of Social Emergence ............................................... R. Keith Sawyer, Washington University in St. Louis, USA The chapter critically examines the sociology of emergence, developing an often-ignored, Durkheîmîan heri¬ tage into what amounts to a manifesto for a social science of emergence resting on a complex understanding of agents Chapter II Agent Cognitive Capabilities and Orders of Social Emergence ................................................................... 17 Christopher GaMspink, Incept Labs, Australia Robert Kay, Ineept Labs, Australia & University of Technology, Sydney, Australia This chapter builds он Sawyer s insights, interrogating the movement from agential properties to social emer¬ gence, and using an enactivist perspective to critique questions of structure and agency in sociology and to explore the challenge of modeling a social emergence that builds from cognitive to social levels. Chapter III Agents and Social Interaction: insights from Social Psychology .................................................................35 Joseph C. Butíingíon, Georgia Southern University, USA This chapter takes ap the genealogical task from the perspective of social psychology and ethology, the other two disciplines MAS research has most often draw« from, in particular» askiag how different agents (hu¬ man and non-hamaa) interact together and how insights from these studies can help researchers bulid more lîfe-îike** agents to ioteraet with us, including some of our more emergent properties (emotion, empathy and inference). Chapter IV Predictive Models of Cultural Information Transmission ............................................................................51 M. Aßal Upal, Defence R&D, Canada This chapter takes the interdisciplinary legacies from the previous chapters into the area of simulations. Chapter V Interaction of Agent in E-Business: A Look at Different Sources ................................................................60 Jorge A. Romero, Towson University, USA This chapter takes aforementioned interdisciplinary legacies into e-business, respectively — and, in the pro¬ cess, bridges the theoretical and conceptual configurations of this section with the emergent organizations in the next. Section II Emergences Chapter VI A Simulation of Temporally Variant Agent Interaction via Passive Inquiry ................................................69 Adam J, Conover, Towson University, USA This chapter critiques the one-dimensional, temporal assumptions built into extant simulations (and, synedo- chicalły, Conway s Game of Life ) and suggests the possibility of introducing heterogeneoas temporalities into simulation design. Chapter VII Agent Feedback Messaging: A Messaging Infrastructure for Distributed Message Delivery ......................84 Richard Schilling, Cognition Group, Inc., USA This chapter exploits some of the diverse temporalities from the previous chapter, in order to build scalable models of agent communications based in part oa biofeedback. Chapter VIII Modeling Cognitive Agents for Social Systems and a Simulation in Urban Dynamics. ............................104 Ты Zhang, Trinity University, USA Mark Lewis, Trinity University, USA Christine Drennon, Trinity University, USA Michael Pellón, Trinity University, USA Phil Coleman, Trinity University, USA Jason Leezer, Trinity University, USA Zhang et at. took to interactionlst models of social cognition in order to build MAS where decision-making emerges from the interactions between agents rather than through the more autonomous models of decision making in classic rational choice theory. Chapter IX Developing Relationships Between Autonomous Agents: Promoting Pro-Social Behaviour Through Virtual Learning Environments Parti ..........................................................................................125 Scott Watson, University of Hertfordshire, UK Kerstin Dautenhahn, University of Hertfordshire, UK Wan Ching (Steve) Ho, University of Hertfordshire, UK Rafal Dawidowicz, University of Hertfordshire, UK This chapter looks to social interactionism, networking, and community in order to build socially interactive virtual agents for the creation of yirtual learning environments. Chapter X Construction of Meanings in Biological and Artificial Agents ...................................................................139 Martin Такт, Comenîus University in Bratislava, Slovakia This chapter underscores the problem and promise of communicative models in MAS. Tacking back and between ethological examples and AI simulation, Takác proposes interactionist communications premised on models of evolutionary adaptation. Chapter XI Training Coordination Proxy Agents Using Reinforcement Learning .......................................................158 Myriam Abramson, Naval Research Laboratory, USA This chapter examines the ways agents might build on models of teamwork in order to coordinate with other agents to fulfill the needs of human agents. Chapter XII The Generative Power of Signs: The Importance of the Autonomous Perception of Tags to the Strong Emergence of Institutions .........................................................................................................173 Deborah V.Duong, OSD/PAE Simulation Analysis Center, USA This chapter looks to one of the relatively undeveloped directions in agent perception in order to build new models for the emergent of MAS socialities. Chapter XIII Prepositional Logic Syntax Acquisition Using Induction and Self-Organisation ......................................185 Josefina Sierra, Universidad Politécnica de Cataluña, Spain Josefina Sartíibáñez, Universidad de La Rioja, Spain This chapter explores the possibility for emergent socialities between diverse agents based on almost sui generis communicative models where syntactical structures emerge in the space of agent interaction. CbapterXlV Hybrid Emotionally Aware Mediated Multiagency .....................................................................................199 Giowenai ШїкєШі, Gruppo Vìncenti, Italy James Bremen, Towsan University, USA This chapter on the other hand explores the possibilities latent in more affective Communications: What advantages might an emotien-based agent have over other kinds of social agents? Ocauå emotion-based agents couple mom effectively with taman ageats? Chapter XV Mapping Hybrid Agencies Through Multiagent Systems ...........................................................................215 Samuel G. Collins, Towson University, USA Goran Trajkovski, Laureate Education Inc., USA This chapter inverts the usual assumptions implicit in MAS by suggesting that it is the human agents who may be emulating non-human agents, and that the task for the researcher is as much to develop different human behaviors as it is as different models for non-human agents. In the process, the authors draw a much richer (and more ambiguous) picture of agent communication (including the possibilities in miscommunicatkm). Fittingly, the application of some of these ideas leads us to questions of second-order emergence. Section III Second Order Emergences Chapter XVI Developing Relationships Between Autonomous Agents: Promoting Pro-Social Behaviour Through Virtual Learning Environments, Part II .......................................................................................229 Scott Watson, University of Hertfordshire, UK Kerstin Dautenhahn, University of Hertfordshire, UK Wan Ching (Steve) Ho, University of Hertfordshire, UK Rafal Dawidowicz, University of Hertfordshire, UK This chapter takes the social theories elaborated in Part I in the designs of Virtual Learning Environments designed to reduce the incidence (as well as mitigate the effects) of school bullying. In these hybrid agent interactions, believability is an emergent category—non-human agents can be too believable (and hence unbelievable), as are ideas about empathy and engagement. Chapter XVII Reputation: Social Transmission for Partner Selection ..............................................................................243 Mario Paolucci, Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology/CNR, Italy Rosaría Conte, Institute of Cognitive Science and Technology/CNR, Italy This chapter looks at reputation as the meta-belief * enabling other beliefs and, in the process, generates other, emergent socialities: cooperation, altruism, and other reciprocal behaviors. Chapter XVIII A Simulation of Temporally Variant Agent Interaction via Belief Promulgation., ..................................... 261 Adam J. Canover, Towson University, USA In this chapter, the forms emerging from temporal variance in a MAS are exploited by agents who attempt to influence eaeh other s beliefs, in the process stretching Conway s cellular automata to new (and emergent) applications fa both simulations and future, hybrid MAS. Chapter XIX The Human Mirror Neuron System ............................................................................................................275 David B. Newlin, RTI International, USA This chapter applies MAS to neurophysiology, and in the process introduces a tantalizing example of second- order emergence in the self-reflexive monitoring of oneself facilitated by the imitative impulse structured into our frontal-parietal mirror neuron system. Chapter XX Relationships Between the Processes of Emergence and Abstraction in Societies ....................................288 Eric Baumer, University of California, Irvine, USA Sill Tomiimon, University of California, Irvine, USA This chapter also incorporates emergent cognition into its models; in this case what the authors terms an abstraction-emergence loop that captures the way agents generalize on their experience and thereby influ¬ ence the behavior of subsequent local behaviors. Chapter XXI Emergent Reasoning Structures in Law .....................................................................................................305 VemR. Walker, Hofstra University, USA in this chapter s applications of a Default-Logic framework result in MAS capable of both rendering legal decisions as well as deliberating on the structure of legal reasoning itself, in the process implicating both human- and non-human agents in the future of the legal process itself. Chapter XXII Agents in Security: A Look at the Use of Agents in Host-Based Monitoring and Protection and Network Intrusion Detection ...............................................................................................................325 Theodor Richardson, South University , USA This chapter develops a model network intrusion where malicious and normal traffic are (secondarily) emergent concepts arising from an emergent MAS consensus. Chapter XXIII Search as a Tool for Emergence ..................................................................................................................341 MkhaelJ. North, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Thomas R Howe, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Nick Collier, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & PantaRei Corporation, USA Eric Tatara, Argonne National Laboratory, USA Jonatfum Ozik, Argonne National Laboratory, USA & The University of Chicago, USA Charles Macal, Argonne National Laboratory1, USA & The University of Chicago, USA This chapter details search tools for emergent agents. As new properties emerge in MAS, the relationship of the observer changes — that Is, new kinds of properties are sought after and search engines represent the boundary between one kind of emergence (emergent properties of agents) and another emergence (new foci emerges from the consciousness of emergent properties). CöapHatießerRerereaces,.......................................,..........................................,.......................___.....364 Äbaiit tbe Coßtriiwtors.........__......................................................._____.___................................400 Іаіеж.....,.,,..,., ____.......................___...___.....................................................__..............__.„„„...„...„..408
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physical XXII, 412 S.
publishDate 2009
publishDateSearch 2009
publishDateSort 2009
publisher Information Science Reference
record_format marc
spellingShingle Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions
Gesellschaft
Künstliche Intelligenz
Social systems Computer simulation
Social evolution Computer simulation
Intelligent agents (Computer software)
Human-computer interaction
Artificial intelligence Social aspects
Agent Informatik (DE-588)4455835-1 gnd
Virtuelle Realität (DE-588)4399931-1 gnd
Künstliche Intelligenz (DE-588)4033447-8 gnd
Computersimulation (DE-588)4148259-1 gnd
Soziales System (DE-588)4055764-9 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4455835-1
(DE-588)4399931-1
(DE-588)4033447-8
(DE-588)4148259-1
(DE-588)4055764-9
(DE-588)4143413-4
title Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions
title_alt Agent-based societies
title_auth Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions
title_exact_search Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions
title_full Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions Goran Trajkovski ; Samuel G. Collins [eds.]
title_fullStr Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions Goran Trajkovski ; Samuel G. Collins [eds.]
title_full_unstemmed Handbook of research on agent-based societies social and cultural interactions Goran Trajkovski ; Samuel G. Collins [eds.]
title_short Handbook of research on agent-based societies
title_sort handbook of research on agent based societies social and cultural interactions
title_sub social and cultural interactions
topic Gesellschaft
Künstliche Intelligenz
Social systems Computer simulation
Social evolution Computer simulation
Intelligent agents (Computer software)
Human-computer interaction
Artificial intelligence Social aspects
Agent Informatik (DE-588)4455835-1 gnd
Virtuelle Realität (DE-588)4399931-1 gnd
Künstliche Intelligenz (DE-588)4033447-8 gnd
Computersimulation (DE-588)4148259-1 gnd
Soziales System (DE-588)4055764-9 gnd
topic_facet Gesellschaft
Künstliche Intelligenz
Social systems Computer simulation
Social evolution Computer simulation
Intelligent agents (Computer software)
Human-computer interaction
Artificial intelligence Social aspects
Agent Informatik
Virtuelle Realität
Computersimulation
Soziales System
Aufsatzsammlung
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017313215&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
work_keys_str_mv AT trajkovskigoran handbookofresearchonagentbasedsocietiessocialandculturalinteractions
AT collinssamuelgerald handbookofresearchonagentbasedsocietiessocialandculturalinteractions
AT trajkovskigoran agentbasedsocieties
AT collinssamuelgerald agentbasedsocieties