Agent-oriented programming

Agent-oriented programming (AOP) is a programming paradigm where the construction of the software is centered on the concept of software agents. In contrast to object-oriented programming which has objects (providing methods with variable parameters) at its core, AOP has externally specified agents (with interfaces and messaging capabilities) at its core. They can be thought of as abstractions of objects. Exchanged messages are interpreted by receiving "agents", in a way specific to its class of agents.

History

Historically the concept of Agent-oriented programming and the idea of centering your software around the concept of agent was first used by Yoav Shoham within his Artificial Intelligence studies, in 1990.[1][2] His agents are specific to his own paradigm as they have just one method, with a single parameter. To quote Yoav Shoham from his paper in 1990 for a basic difference between of AOP against OOP:

...agent-oriented programming (AOP), which can be viewed as a specialization of object-oriented programming. ...
OOP AOP
Basic unit object agent
Parameters defining state of basic unit unconstrained beliefs, commitments, capabilities, choices....
Process of computation message passing and response methods message passing and response methods
Types of message unconstrained inform, request, offer, promise, decline....

Frameworks

There are multiple AOP 'frameworks' also called Agent Platforms that implement Shoham's programming paradigm. The following examples illustrate how a basic agent is programmed as a Hello World Program.

JADE

For the Java-platform one of the frameworks is JADE [3] (http://jade.tilab.com/). Here is a very basic example of an Agent that runs code

package helloworld;
import jade.core.Agent;

public class Hello extends Agent {
	
	protected void setup() { 
		System.out.println("Hello World. ");
		System.out.println("My name is "+ getLocalName()); 
	}
	
	public Hello() {
		System.out.println("Constructor called");
	}

}

At the core of JADE's AOP model is that its API supports the standard FIPA Agent Communication Language

Agent Speak (Jason)

For a literal translation of Agent Oriented concepts into a scheme unobfuscated as is JADE, behind Java and Object Orientedness, Agent Speak [4] (Jason) provides a "natural" language for agents.

	
	started.

	+started <- .print("Hello World. ").

SARL Language

SARL[5] (SARL website) provides the fundamental abstractions for coding multiagent systems. It uses a script-like syntax (inspired by Scala and Ruby).

package helloworld
import io.sarl.core.Initialize
agent HelloWorldAgent {
        on Initialize {	
             println("Hello World.")
        }
}

Middleware

One way to implement modular or extensible AOP support is to define standard AOP APIs to middleware functions that are themselves implemented as software agents. For example, a directory service can be implemented as a FIPA directory facilitator or DF software agent; life-cycle management to start, stop, suspend and resume agents can be implemented as a FIPA Agent Management Service or AMS agent.[6] A benefit of the AOP approach is that it support more dynamic roles between different users and providers of applications, services and networks. For example, traditionally, networks and services were usually managed by the network and service provider on behalf of the customer and offered as a single virtual network service but customers themselves are becoming more empowered to integrate and manage their own services. This can be achieved via AOP and APIs to middleware agents that can flexibly and dynamically manage communication.[7]

See also

References

  1. Shoham, Y. (1990). Agent-Oriented Programming (Technical Report STAN-CS-90-1335). Stanford University: Computer Science Department.
  2. Shoham, Y. (1993). Agent-Oriented Programming. Artificial Intelligence. pp. 51–92. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.123.5119Freely accessible.
  3. Bellifeminee, Fabio; Agostino Poggi; Giovanni Rimassa (2001). JADE: a FIPA2000 compliant agent development environment. Proceedings of the fifth international conference on Autonomous agents. pp. 216–217.
  4. Anand S. Rao, 1996. AgentSpeak(L): BDI Agents Speak Out in a Logical Computable Language. Proceedings of Seventh European Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World (MAAMAW-96).
  5. Sebastian Rodriguez, Nicolas Gaud, Stéphane Galland, 2014. SARL: a general-purpose agent-oriented programming language. In the 2014 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Intelligent Agent Technology. Warsaw, Poland: IEEE Computer Society Press.
  6. Poslad, S (2007). "Specifying Protocols for Multi-agent System Interaction". ACM Transactions on Autonomous and Adaptive Systems. 4 (4). doi:10.1145/1293731.1293735.
  7. Poslad, S; J. Pitt; A. Mamdani; R. Hadingham; P. Buckle (1999). Agent-oriented middleware for integrating customer network services. In: Software Agents for Future Communication Systems, Hayzelden A, Bigham J Eds. pp. 221–242.
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