Using argumentation to model and deploy agent-based β2β applications

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Source of Publication

Knowledge-Based Systems

Publication Date

10-1-2010

Abstract

This paper presents an agent-based framework for modeling and deploying Business-to-Business (B2B) applications, where autonomous agents act on behalf of the individual components that form these applications. This framework consists of three levels identified by strategic, application, and resource, with focus in this paper on the first two levels. The strategic level is about the common vision that independent businesses define as part of their decision of partnership. The application level is about the business processes that get virtually combined as result of this common vision. As conflicts are bound to arise among the independent applications/agents, the framework uses a formal model based on computational argumentation theory through a persuasion protocol to detect and resolve these conflicts. In this protocol, agents reason about partial information using partial arguments, partial attack, and partial acceptability. Agents can then jointly find arguments that support a new solution for their conflicts, which is not known by any of them individually. Termination, soundness, and completeness properties of this protocol are provided. Distributed and centralized coordination strategies are also supported in this framework, which is illustrated with an online-purchasing example. © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

ISSN

0950-7051

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Volume

23

Issue

7

First Page

677

Last Page

692

Disciplines

Business | Computer Sciences

Keywords

β2β, Agent communication, Argumentation theory, Conflict, Persuasion

Scopus ID

77955510098

Indexed in Scopus

yes

Open Access

yes

Open Access Type

Green: A manuscript of this publication is openly available in a repository

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