Title :
Agents for distributed decision-making
Author :
Talukdar, Sarosh
Author_Institution :
Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract :
Agents are modules from which problem solving can be built. Structurally, an agent is a bundle of sensors, decision-makers and actuators; behaviorally, an agent is a mapping from an in-space (all the things the agent can sense) to an out-space (all things the agent can affect). Agents can be simple or compound. More specifically, lesser agents can be organized into greater or super-agents. An agent in an organization is autonomous to the extent that it is unsupervised. In this paper the benefits of an autonomous agent is discussed. However, there is a downside to autonomy: the work of completely autonomous agents cannot be externally coordinated. Unless such agents are self-coordinating, they will tend to work at cross-purposes, creating pandemonium rather than progress. The mechanism for self-coordination of an autonomous agent is presented in this paper.
Keywords :
distributed decision making; software agents; actuators; autonomous agent; decision-makers; distributed decision-making; self-coordination; sensor bundle; Actuators; Automata; Automatic control; Autonomous agents; Control systems; Distributed decision making; Insects; Problem-solving; Software agents; Thermostats;
Conference_Titel :
Power Engineering Society General Meeting, 2003, IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7989-6
DOI :
10.1109/PES.2003.1267127