Computational Logic in Multi-Agent Systems 13th International Workshop, CLIMA XIII, Montpellier, France, August 27-28, 2012, Proceedings / [electronic resource] :
edited by Michael Fisher, Leon van der Torre, Mehdi Dastani, Guido Governatori.
- 1st ed. 2012.
- 228 p. 50 illus. online resource.
- Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 7486 2945-9141 ; .
- Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 7486 .
Bipolar Argumentation Frames and Contrary to Duty Obligations, Preliminary Report -- Multi-agent Only-Knowing -- Logics for Reasoning about Agents' Attitudes in Strategic Contexts -- A Time-Situated Meta-logic for Characterizing Goal-Processing Bounded Agents -- Distributed Defeasible Speculative Reasoning in Ambient Environment -- A Formal Semantics for Agent (Re)Organization -- Epistemic ATL with Perfect Recall, Past and Strategy Contexts -- Using Evolution Graphs for Describing Topology-Aware Prediction Models in Large Clusters -- Enhancing Goal-Based Requirements Consistency: An Argumentation-Based Approach -- A Game Theoretic Approach for Optimal Network Topologies in Opportunistic Networks -- MKNF Knowledge Bases in Multi-Context Systems -- Implementing Reversible Processes in Multi-agent Action Languages Using Answer Set Planning -- Full Hybrid μ-Calculus, Its Bisimulation Invariance and Application to Argumentation -- A Numerical Approach to the Merging of Argumentation Networks.
This book constitutes the proceedings of the 13th International Workshop on Computational Logic in Multi-Agent Systems, CLIMA XIII, held in Montpellier, France, in August 2012. The 11 regular papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 27 submissions and presented with three invited papers. The purpose of the CLIMA workshops is to provide a forum for discussing techniques, based on computational logic, for representing, programming and reasoning about agents and multi-agent systems in a formal way.
9783642328978
10.1007/978-3-642-32897-8 doi
Artificial intelligence. Machine theory. Software engineering. Compilers (Computer programs). Computer science. Artificial Intelligence. Formal Languages and Automata Theory. Software Engineering. Compilers and Interpreters. Computer Science Logic and Foundations of Programming.