Title
Agent-based organizational structures for ambient intelligence scenarios
Abstract
In a society where Information and Communication Technology (ICT) becomes a key component to improve the quality of our daily-life, systems' complexity dramatically increases to better accommodate to an inherent complexity of users' requirements, especially when dealing with pervasive computing. This poses demanding architectural requirements such as massive decentralization and disintermediation along with self-organizing properties. This higher level of system complexity has triggered the birth of several software engineering methodologies that adopt the agent paradigm. Design patterns are a well known approach for capturing and reusing knowledge related to known solution for recurrent architectural problems. Even though the importance of patterns is growing as systems become more and more complex, their development does not keep up with the evolving requirements, as traditional agent patterns are unable to support the majority of current complex social scenarios. This work motivates the need for new agent-based organizational structures that are more flexible than traditional agent patterns such as, Broker and Matchmaker. The newly suggested structure supports the dynamic nature of “Active Environment” where groups of agents are formed for service delivery and then dissolved with no central coordinating mechanism—i.e., gaining the disintermediation property. Serving as a case study, the PEACH and PIL projects have paved the way for experimenting with the new agent-based organizational structures that are more flexible and more suitable than traditional agent patterns for coping with ambient intelligence scenarios.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.3233/AIS-2010-0083
JAISE
Keywords
Field
DocType
ambient intelligence scenario,architectural requirement,agent-based organizational structure,new agent-based organizational structure,current complex social scenario,system complexity,agent paradigm,inherent complexity,recurrent architectural problem,known solution,disintermediation property,traditional agent pattern,service oriented computing,ambient intelligence,organizational structure
Organizational structure,Information technology,Simulation,Computer science,Ambient intelligence,Software design pattern,Disintermediation,Software development process,Ubiquitous computing,Service-oriented architecture
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
2
4
1876-1364
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
6
0.42
43
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Loris Penserini134027.17
Tsvi Kuflik21280111.75
Paolo Busetta337130.50
Paolo Bresciani4119072.00