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Special Issue: Intelligent agents in design

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2005

JOHN S. GERO
Affiliation:
Key Centre of Design Computing and Cognition, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
FRANCES M.T. BRAZIER
Affiliation:
Intelligent Interactive Distributed Systems Group, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Extract

This Special Issue had its genesis in an international Workshop on Agents in Design held in June 2002, at MIT by the Guest Editors. Computational agents have been developed within the artificial intelligence community over an extended period. The concept of an agent can be traced to Carl Hewitt's 1977 work on “actors.” Hewitt defined actors as self-contained, interactive, and concurrently executing objects. Since then, considerable research has gone into developing the concept of an agent and into formalizing agents, developing multiagent systems, and exploring their use. The use of agents in design is more recent, and the first PhDs in the area appeared in the early 1990s. Although a precise and unique definition of an agent has yet to be agreed upon, one distinguishing characteristic of an agent is that it exhibits autonomous behavior. Research on agents in design focuses on two primary areas: how to make agents useful in design, and how to apply them to design tasks. This Special Issue has papers from both areas.

Type
GUEST EDITORIAL
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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