2 research outputs found

    An executable Theory of Multi-Agent Systems Refinement

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    Complex applications such as incident management, social simulations, manufacturing applications, electronic auctions, e-institutions, and business to business applications are pervasive and important nowadays. Agent-oriented methodology is an advance in abstractionwhich can be used by software developers to naturally model and develop systems for suchapplications. In general, with respect to design methodologies, what it may be important tostress is that control structures should be added at later stages of design, in a natural top-downmanner going from speciļ¬cations to implementations, by reļ¬nement. Too much detail (be itfor the sake of efļ¬ciency) in speciļ¬cations often turns out to be harmful. To paraphrase D.E.Knuth, ā€œPremature optimization is the root of all evilā€ (quoted in ā€˜The Unix ProgrammingEnvironmentā€™ by Kernighan and Pine, p. 91).The aim of this thesis is to adapt formal techniques to the agent-oriented methodologyinto an executable theory of reļ¬nement. The justiļ¬cation for doing so is to provide correctagent-based software by design. The underlying logical framework of the theory we proposeis based on rewriting logic, thus the theory is executable in the same sense as rewriting logicis. The storyline is as follows. We ļ¬rst motivate and explain constituting elements of agentlanguages chosen to represent both abstract and concrete levels of design. We then proposea deļ¬nition of reļ¬nement between agents written in such languages. This notion of reļ¬nement ensures that concrete agents are correct with respect to the abstract ones. The advantageof the deļ¬nition is that it easily leads to formulating a proof technique for reļ¬nement viathe classical notion of simulation. This makes it possible to effectively verify reļ¬nement bymodel-checking. Additionally, we propose a weakest precondition calculus as a deductivemethod based on assertions which allow to prove correctness of inļ¬nite state agents. Wegeneralise the reļ¬nement relation from single agents to multi-agent systems in order to ensure that concrete multi-agent systems reļ¬ne their abstractions. We see multi-agent systemsas collections of coordinated agents, and we consider coordination artefacts as being basedeither on actions or on normative rules. We integrate these two orthogonal coordinationmechanisms within the same reļ¬nement theory extended to a timed framework. Finally, wediscuss implementation aspects.LEI Universiteit LeidenFoundations of Software Technolog
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