DocumentCode :
3459695
Title :
Extending the UML for designing Jack agents
Author :
Papasimeon, Michael ; Heinze, Clint
Author_Institution :
Aeronaut. & Marine Res. Lab., DSTO, Fishermans Bend, Vic., Australia
fYear :
2001
fDate :
2001
Firstpage :
89
Lastpage :
97
Abstract :
Mainstreaming and industrialising agent technologies requires suitable methodological and technological support for the various engineering activities associated with managing the complexity of any software system development. Despite its origins in object oriented software engineering the UML provides a rich and extensible set of modelling constructs that can be applied to agent oriented technologies. This paper provides details of extensions to the UML for the design of agents that are to be implemented in the JACK language. These extensions provide the capacity to model the behaviour of agents for the purposes of design and, though the extensions are language specific, future generalisation and application to other agent languages can be supported as a industry-wide consensus about the nature of agency emerges over the next few years. This research builds on previously proposed extensions to the UML and moves a step closer to the goal of providing through-life engineering support to agent oriented systems development. This work is motivated by a pressing need to maintain, modify, develop and deploy existing and future agent based simulations of military operations for the Australian Defence Force
Keywords :
software agents; specification languages; JACK language; UML; agent based simulations; agent oriented systems; agent technologies; design of agents; military operations; Computer industry; Engineering management; Lifting equipment; Maintenance engineering; Object oriented modeling; Software development management; Software engineering; Software systems; Technology management; Unified modeling language;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering Conference, 2001. Proceedings. 2001 Australian
Conference_Location :
Canberra, ACT
ISSN :
1530-0803
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1254-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ASWEC.2001.948502
Filename :
948502
Link To Document :
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