Semantic Agents on the Internet. Furht, B., editor In Encyclopedia of Multimedia, pages 798–799. Springer US, 2008. 00000
Semantic Agents on the Internet [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
DefinitionSemantic agents belong to intelligent agents, which is a software program that exhibits a goal oriented behavior, interacts with distributed entities – including media and other agents – and attempts to satisfy user-specified requirements.Agent-oriented programming and Agent Communication Languages (ACL) are now relatively well understood and documented [1]. Key to all ACL's – and all agent interactions – is a shared syntax and semantic of the domain of discourse and the interaction protocols. An ontology is an artifact that can provide such a shared model. Naturally, on the Internet, no single ontology describes all information from every attitude. In fact, the vast majority of Internet information is unstructured, informally interlinked at best, and lacking formal semantic. These facts hinder agent-based internet activities and as a result, semantic agents on the Internet tend to be specialized for particular domains; i.e., those domains providing well-structured ...
@incollection{furht_semantic_2008,
	title = {Semantic {Agents} on the {Internet}},
	copyright = {©2008 Springer-Verlag},
	isbn = {978-0-387-74724-8 978-0-387-78414-4},
	url = {http://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-0-387-78414-4_207},
	abstract = {DefinitionSemantic agents belong to intelligent agents, which is a software program that exhibits a goal oriented behavior, interacts with distributed entities – including media and other agents – and attempts to satisfy user-specified requirements.Agent-oriented programming and Agent Communication Languages (ACL) are now relatively well understood and documented [1]. Key to all ACL's – and all agent interactions – is a shared syntax and semantic of the domain of discourse and the interaction protocols. An ontology is an artifact that can provide such a shared model. Naturally, on the Internet, no single ontology describes all information from every attitude. In fact, the vast majority of Internet information is unstructured, informally interlinked at best, and lacking formal semantic. These facts hinder agent-based internet activities and as a result, semantic agents on the Internet tend to be specialized for particular domains; i.e., those domains providing well-structured ...},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2016-05-03},
	booktitle = {Encyclopedia of {Multimedia}},
	publisher = {Springer US},
	editor = {Furht, Borko},
	year = {2008},
	note = {00000},
	pages = {798--799}
}

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