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Cooperative Information Agents IV - The Future of Information Agents in Cyberspace: 4th International Workshop, CIA 2000 Boston, Ma, Usa, July 7-9, 20

Contributor(s): Klusch, Matthias (Editor), Kerschberg, Larry (Editor)

ISBN: 9783540677031

Publisher: Springer

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Pub Date: June 21, 2000

Dewey: 006.33

LCCN: 00044680

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.64" H x 9.21" L x 6.14" W ( 0.94 lbs) 282 pages

Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science

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Description: These arethe proceedingsof the Fourth InternationalWorkshopon Cooperative Information Agents, held in Boston Massachusetts, USA, July 7-9, 2000. Cooperative information agent research and development focused originally onaccessingmultiple, heterogeneous, anddistributedinformationsources. Ga- ingaccesstothesesystems, throughInternetsearchengines, applicationprogram interfaces, wrappers, and web-based screens has been an important focus of - operative intelligent agents. Research has also focused on the integration of this information into a coherent model that combined data and knowledge from the multiple sources. Finally, this information is disseminated to a wide audience, giving rise to issues such as data quality, information pedigree, source reliability, information security, personal privacy, and information value. Research in - operative information agents has expanded to include agent negotiation, agent communities, agent mobility, as well as agent collaboration for information d- covery in constrained environments. TheinterdisciplinaryCIAworkshopseriesencompassesa widevarietyoft- ics dealing with cooperative information agents. All workshop proceedings have been published by Springer as Lecture Notes in Arti?cial Intelligence, Volumes 1202 (1997), 1435 (1998), and 1652 (1999), respectively. This year, the theme of the CIA workshop was "'The Future of Information Agents in Cyberspace", a very ?tting topic as the use of agents for information gathering, negotiation, correlation, fusion, and dissemination becomes ever more prevalent. We noted a marked trend in CIA 2000 towards addressing issues related to communities of agents that: (1) negotiate for information resources, (2) build robust ontologies to enhance search capabilities, (3) communicate forplanning and problem so- ing, (4) learn and evolve based on their experiences, and (5) assume increasing degrees of autonomy in the control of complex systems.

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