Self-organising multi-agent systems: algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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New Jersey ; London ; Singapore ; Beijing ; Shanghai ; Hong Kong ; Taipei ; Chennai ; Tokyo
World Scientific
[2022]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | xxiv, 375 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781800610422 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface vii About the Author xv Part I: Foundations 1 Chapter 1. 3 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Multi-Agent Systems Introduction.................................................................... 3 Example: The SmartHouse ........................................ 6 1.2.1 Community Energy Systems......................... 6 1.2.2 Three Contextual Issues ............................... 8 Open Systems and Agent Societies............................ 10 1.3.1 Open Systems................................................. 10 1.3.2 Open Societies and Agent Societies............ 13 Methodology: Sociologically-Inspired Computing................................................................... 14 Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems ... 16 1.5.1 Autonomous Agents........................................ 17 1.5.2 Multi-Agent Systems..................................... 22 Agent Communication................................................. 23 1.6.1 The Contract-Net Protocol............................ 23 1.6.2 Standardisation and FIPA ACL...................... 25 1.6.3 Institutionalised Power.................................. 26 Specification of Agent Societies.................................. 28 1.7.1 Norm-Governed MAS (NG-MAS).................... 28 xvii
xviii Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 1.7.2 Dynamic NG-MAS ........................................ 1.7.3 Event Calculus................................................. Simulation and Animation........................................... Summary....................................................................... 1.8 1.9 Chapter 2. 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Self-Organising Systems Introduction.................................................................... Example: Same As It Ever Was.................................. Emergence .................................................................... 2.3.1 Swarms.............................................................. 2.3.2 Cellular Automata........................................... 2.3.3 Self-Organisation ........................................... 2.3.4 Planned Emergence........................................ The Self and The Organisation.................................. 2.4.1 The Self........................................................... 2.4.2 The Organisation........................................... The Dimensions of Self-Organisation......................... 2.5.1 An Analytic Framework for Self-Organisation ........................................... 2.5.2 The General Setting for Self-Organisation ........................................... The Mechanics of Change........................................... 2.6.1 Parameter Modification.................................. 2.6.2 Policy Modification........................................
Summary....................................................................... 29 32 35 39 41 41 43 45 45 46 48 50 51 52 53 56 56 56 59 60 62 66 Part II: Strategic Interaction 69 Chapter 3. 71 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Game Theory Introduction.................................................................... Example: The Kitchen Stand-Off............................... Game Theory: Terminology and Representation ... 3.3.1 Utility and Preferences.................................. 3.3.2 Games: Matrix Form and Extensive Form.............................................. Solution Concepts ....................................................... 3.4.1 Dominant Strategy........................................ 3.4.2 Nash Equilibrium Strategy............................ 71 73 74 74 76 78 78 78
Contents 3.4.3 Pareto Optimal Strategy............................... 79 3.4.4 Social Welfare Maximisation........................ 80 3.4.5 The Kitchen Stand-Off, Revisited................... 81 3.4.6 The Hawk-Dove Game, aka Chicken............ 83 The Prisoners’ Dilemma.............................................. 85 3.5.1 Analysing the Prisoners’ Dilemma................... 85 3.5.2 The Iterated Prisoners’ Dilemma.................. 87 3.5.3 A Slight Digression on Rationality................... 89 Other 2-Player Games................................................. 90 3.6.1 (Pure) Coordination Game............................ 90 3.6.2 Battle of the Sexes ........................................ 91 3.6.3 Stag Hunt Game.............................................. 91 3.6.4 Ultimatum Game........................................... 93 3.6.5 Focal Point Games ........................................ 93 Beyond 2-Player Games.............................................. 94 3.7.1 n-Player Games.............................................. 94 3.7.2 Coalitions and the Shapley Value................... 96 3.7.3 Evolutionary Game Theory............................ 96 Summary....................................................................... 97 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Chapter 4. 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 XIX Social Choice Theory 101 Introduction......................................................................101 Example: The Big Breakfast Menu Variations .... 102 The Vocabulary of Social Choice Theory..................... 103 4.3.1
Basics...................................................................104 4.3.2 Aggregation Rules............................................. 104 4.3.3 Some ‘Nice’ Properties.................................... 106 4.3.4 The Condorcet Winner and Condorcet Loser...................................................................108 4.3.5 Example: Skulduggery in the Roman Senate ................................................................110 Voting Procedures..........................................................112 4.4.1 Running Example............................................. 112 4.4.2 Procedures..........................................................112 4.4.3 The D’Hondt Method....................................... 116 Paradox Abounds.............................................................117 4.5.1 Condorcet’s Paradoxes.................................... 117 4.5.2 Yet More Paradoxical Results........................119 4.5.3 Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem........................120
Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems XX 4.6 4.7 4.5.4 Gibbard-Satterthwaite Theorem.....................121 4.5.5 Comparison of Voting Methods .....................122 A Voting Protocol..........................................................123 4.6.1 Actions and Fluents.......................................... 124 4.6.2 Institutionalised Powers.................................... 124 4.6.3 Permission and Obligation.............................. 126 4.6.4 Implementation Route .................................... 128 Summary and Conclusions............................................. 128 Chapter 5. 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 131 Introduction...................................................................... 131 Example: The Missing Sausage Quarrel.....................133 Alternative Dispute Resolution.................................... 134 Test Domain ...................................................................136 5.4.1 Mass-Participation Content Creations .... 136 5.4.2 Colored Trails....................................................138 5.4.3 Coloured Trials .................................................139 5.4.4 Experimental Parameters in Coloured Trials...................................................................141 Error Toleration: Access Control................................. 141 5.5.1 Basics of Access Control................................. 142 5.5.2 Fluents, Actions and Institutionalised Power...................................................................143 5.5.3 Permission and Obligation.............................. 145 5.5.4
Sanction.............................................................146 Error Retrospection: RegulatoryCompliance .... 148 5.6.1 Token Surrender................................................ 148 5.6.2 Location Movement.......................................... 149 5.6.3 Communication: Token Exchange..................150 5.6.4 Outcome.............................................................152 Error Recovery: Alternative DisputeResolution . . . 152 5.7.1 Informal Specification....................................... 152 5.7.2 Phase I: Initiation............................................. 154 5.7.3 Phase II: ADR Method Selection ..................155 5.7.4 Phase III: Execution ....................................... 158 Summary......................................................................... 159 Chapter 6. 6.1 Alternative Dispute Resolution Ostrom Institution Theory 163 Introduction....................................................................... 163
Contents 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 xxi Example: The Common-Pool Refrigerator..................165 Collective Action.............................................................167 6.3.1 Three Types of Collective Action ..................167 6.3.2 Common-Pool Resource Management .... 169 6.3.3 Linear Public Good Games..............................170 Self-Governing (Ostrom) Institutions...........................172 6.4.1 Collective Action: Analytically and Empirically..........................................................173 6.4.2 Self-Governing Institutions.............................. 174 6.4.3 Institutional Analysis and Development . . . 177 Self-Organising Electronic Institutions........................179 6.5.1 Structural and Functional Specification . . . 179 6.5.2 Procedural Specification ................................. 182 6.5.3 Self-Governing Institutions and Sustainable MAS ............................................. 183 Boundaries and Congruence.......................................... 184 6.6.1 Experimental Setting....................................... 185 6.6.2 Specification Space.......................................... 186 6.6.3 Policy Specification.......................................... 187 6.6.4 Experimental Results....................................... 189 Dignity, Polycentricity and Self-Amendment...............190 6.7.1 Principle 7 and the Zone of Dignity............ 191 6.7.2 Principle 8 and Polycentricity........................193 6.7.3 The Paradox of Self-Amendment.....................197
Summary.........................................................................199 Part III: Social Interaction 203 Chapter 7. 205 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Computational Justice Introduction......................................................................205 Example: The Biscuit Distribution Dilemma...............207 Justice and Fairness: A Brief Overview........................209 7.3.1 A Brief Review of Distributive Justice . . . . 210 7.3.2 Fairness............................................................... 212 7.3.3 Rescher’s Theory of Distributive Justice............................................................... 215 Distributive Justice......................................................... 217 7.4.1 Satisfaction and Compliance............................218
xxii Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 7.4.2 Representing Legitimate Claims.....................219 7.4.3 Computing a Resource Allocation..................219 7.4.4 Self-Organising the Weights ...........................221 7.4.5 Some Experimental Results..............................223 Retributive Justice..........................................................226 7.5.1 Experimental Setting....................................... 227 7.5.2 Policy Specification.......................................... 229 7.5.3 Experimental Results....................................... 231 Procedural Justice..........................................................232 7.6.1 Participation Principle.................................... 234 7.6.2 Transparency Principle and Balancing Principle.............................................................238 7.6.3 Procedural Justice: On Reflection..................240 A General Framework................................................... 241 Summary.........................................................................242 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 Chapter 8. 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 Artificial Social Construction 245 Introduction......................................................................245 Example: The Cheese-and-Wine Controversy .... 247 Trust.................................................................................. 248 8.3.1 Making Decisions Under Uncertainty .... 249 8.3.2 A Socio-Cognitive Trust Framework............ 251 8.3.3 Trust in a Producer-Consumer
Scenario.............................................................253 Forgiveness......................................................................253 8.4.1 Trust Breakdowns............................................. 254 8.4.2 A Forgiveness Framework................................. 255 8.4.3 Forgiveness in Computer-Mediated Communication................................................ 258 Electronic Social Capital................................................ 259 8.5.1 Favours................................................................259 8.5.2 Social Capital....................................................260 8.5.3 A Social Capital Framework........................... 261 8.5.4 The Unscrupulous Diners’ Dilemma...............264 Values............................................................................... 265 8.6.1 Depreciating Values.......................................... 265 8.6.2 Reinventing Values .......................................... 268 Artificial Social Constructionism................................. 271 Summary.........................................................................272
Contents Chapter 9. 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 Knowledge Aggregation 275 Introduction......................................................................275 Example: The Kitchen Aggravation..............................277 Judgement Aggregation................................................ 279 9.3.1 The Condorcet Jury Theorem........................279 9.3.2 The Doctrinal Paradox....................................281 Opinion Formation......................................................... 284 9.4.1 Hegselmann-Krause Model..............................285 9.4.2 Ramirez-Cano-Pitt Model..............................285 Social Networks............................................................... 286 9.5.1 Networks: Some Definitions and Metrics............................................................... 287 9.5.2 Ring and All-to-All Networks ........................289 9.5.3 Random Graphs (Erdös-Rényi) Networks............................................................ 291 9.5.4 Small-World (Watts-Strogatz) Networks............................................................ 292 9.5.5 Scale-Free (Barabási-Albert) Networks............................................................ 293 A Framework for Interactional Justice........................295 9.6.1 Individual Self-Assessment..............................295 9.6.2 Collective Assessment.......................................297 9.6.3 Implementation................................................ 298 Experiments with Interactional Justice........................300 9.7.1 Economy of
Scarcity.......................................... 301 9.7.2 ‘Clique’ Detection and Protection................. 302 9.7.3 Network Variations.......................................... 305 Summary.........................................................................307 Chapter 10. Algorithmic Self-Governance 10.1 10.2 10.3 xxiii 311 Introduction......................................................................311 Example: The Ministry of Culinary Affairs................. 313 Knowledge Management................................................ 315 10.3.1 Knowledge Management in Classical Athens............................................................... 315 10.3.2 Facts, Policies and Values.................................317 10.4 Relevant Expertise Aggregation....................................320 10.5 The Tolerance of Dissent................................................ 322
xxiv Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9 Basic Democracy and Demopolis.................................324 10.6.1 Basic Democracy ............................................. 325 10.6.2 Demopolis......................................................... 327 10.6.3 SimDemopolis................................................... 328 Experiments with SimDemopolis................................. 330 10.7.1 Civic Participation .......................................... 330 10.7.2 Legislation..........................................................336 10.7.3 Entrenchment....................................................338 Algorithmic Comparative Politics ..................................341 Summary: Why This Stuff Matters.............................. 344 Bibliography 347 Index 369
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adam_txt |
Contents Preface vii About the Author xv Part I: Foundations 1 Chapter 1. 3 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Multi-Agent Systems Introduction. 3 Example: The SmartHouse . 6 1.2.1 Community Energy Systems. 6 1.2.2 Three Contextual Issues . 8 Open Systems and Agent Societies. 10 1.3.1 Open Systems. 10 1.3.2 Open Societies and Agent Societies. 13 Methodology: Sociologically-Inspired Computing. 14 Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems . 16 1.5.1 Autonomous Agents. 17 1.5.2 Multi-Agent Systems. 22 Agent Communication. 23 1.6.1 The Contract-Net Protocol. 23 1.6.2 Standardisation and FIPA ACL. 25 1.6.3 Institutionalised Power. 26 Specification of Agent Societies. 28 1.7.1 Norm-Governed MAS (NG-MAS). 28 xvii
xviii Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 1.7.2 Dynamic NG-MAS . 1.7.3 Event Calculus. Simulation and Animation. Summary. 1.8 1.9 Chapter 2. 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Self-Organising Systems Introduction. Example: Same As It Ever Was. Emergence . 2.3.1 Swarms. 2.3.2 Cellular Automata. 2.3.3 Self-Organisation . 2.3.4 Planned Emergence. The Self and The Organisation. 2.4.1 The Self. 2.4.2 The Organisation. The Dimensions of Self-Organisation. 2.5.1 An Analytic Framework for Self-Organisation . 2.5.2 The General Setting for Self-Organisation . The Mechanics of Change. 2.6.1 Parameter Modification. 2.6.2 Policy Modification.
Summary. 29 32 35 39 41 41 43 45 45 46 48 50 51 52 53 56 56 56 59 60 62 66 Part II: Strategic Interaction 69 Chapter 3. 71 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Game Theory Introduction. Example: The Kitchen Stand-Off. Game Theory: Terminology and Representation . 3.3.1 Utility and Preferences. 3.3.2 Games: Matrix Form and Extensive Form. Solution Concepts . 3.4.1 Dominant Strategy. 3.4.2 Nash Equilibrium Strategy. 71 73 74 74 76 78 78 78
Contents 3.4.3 Pareto Optimal Strategy. 79 3.4.4 Social Welfare Maximisation. 80 3.4.5 The Kitchen Stand-Off, Revisited. 81 3.4.6 The Hawk-Dove Game, aka Chicken. 83 The Prisoners’ Dilemma. 85 3.5.1 Analysing the Prisoners’ Dilemma. 85 3.5.2 The Iterated Prisoners’ Dilemma. 87 3.5.3 A Slight Digression on Rationality. 89 Other 2-Player Games. 90 3.6.1 (Pure) Coordination Game. 90 3.6.2 Battle of the Sexes . 91 3.6.3 Stag Hunt Game. 91 3.6.4 Ultimatum Game. 93 3.6.5 Focal Point Games . 93 Beyond 2-Player Games. 94 3.7.1 n-Player Games. 94 3.7.2 Coalitions and the Shapley Value. 96 3.7.3 Evolutionary Game Theory. 96 Summary. 97 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Chapter 4. 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 XIX Social Choice Theory 101 Introduction.101 Example: The Big Breakfast Menu Variations . 102 The Vocabulary of Social Choice Theory. 103 4.3.1
Basics.104 4.3.2 Aggregation Rules. 104 4.3.3 Some ‘Nice’ Properties. 106 4.3.4 The Condorcet Winner and Condorcet Loser.108 4.3.5 Example: Skulduggery in the Roman Senate .110 Voting Procedures.112 4.4.1 Running Example. 112 4.4.2 Procedures.112 4.4.3 The D’Hondt Method. 116 Paradox Abounds.117 4.5.1 Condorcet’s Paradoxes. 117 4.5.2 Yet More Paradoxical Results.119 4.5.3 Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem.120
Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems XX 4.6 4.7 4.5.4 Gibbard-Satterthwaite Theorem.121 4.5.5 Comparison of Voting Methods .122 A Voting Protocol.123 4.6.1 Actions and Fluents. 124 4.6.2 Institutionalised Powers. 124 4.6.3 Permission and Obligation. 126 4.6.4 Implementation Route . 128 Summary and Conclusions. 128 Chapter 5. 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 131 Introduction. 131 Example: The Missing Sausage Quarrel.133 Alternative Dispute Resolution. 134 Test Domain .136 5.4.1 Mass-Participation Content Creations . 136 5.4.2 Colored Trails.138 5.4.3 Coloured Trials .139 5.4.4 Experimental Parameters in Coloured Trials.141 Error Toleration: Access Control. 141 5.5.1 Basics of Access Control. 142 5.5.2 Fluents, Actions and Institutionalised Power.143 5.5.3 Permission and Obligation. 145 5.5.4
Sanction.146 Error Retrospection: RegulatoryCompliance . 148 5.6.1 Token Surrender. 148 5.6.2 Location Movement. 149 5.6.3 Communication: Token Exchange.150 5.6.4 Outcome.152 Error Recovery: Alternative DisputeResolution . . . 152 5.7.1 Informal Specification. 152 5.7.2 Phase I: Initiation. 154 5.7.3 Phase II: ADR Method Selection .155 5.7.4 Phase III: Execution . 158 Summary. 159 Chapter 6. 6.1 Alternative Dispute Resolution Ostrom Institution Theory 163 Introduction. 163
Contents 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 xxi Example: The Common-Pool Refrigerator.165 Collective Action.167 6.3.1 Three Types of Collective Action .167 6.3.2 Common-Pool Resource Management . 169 6.3.3 Linear Public Good Games.170 Self-Governing (Ostrom) Institutions.172 6.4.1 Collective Action: Analytically and Empirically.173 6.4.2 Self-Governing Institutions. 174 6.4.3 Institutional Analysis and Development . . . 177 Self-Organising Electronic Institutions.179 6.5.1 Structural and Functional Specification . . . 179 6.5.2 Procedural Specification . 182 6.5.3 Self-Governing Institutions and Sustainable MAS . 183 Boundaries and Congruence. 184 6.6.1 Experimental Setting. 185 6.6.2 Specification Space. 186 6.6.3 Policy Specification. 187 6.6.4 Experimental Results. 189 Dignity, Polycentricity and Self-Amendment.190 6.7.1 Principle 7 and the Zone of Dignity. 191 6.7.2 Principle 8 and Polycentricity.193 6.7.3 The Paradox of Self-Amendment.197
Summary.199 Part III: Social Interaction 203 Chapter 7. 205 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Computational Justice Introduction.205 Example: The Biscuit Distribution Dilemma.207 Justice and Fairness: A Brief Overview.209 7.3.1 A Brief Review of Distributive Justice . . . . 210 7.3.2 Fairness. 212 7.3.3 Rescher’s Theory of Distributive Justice. 215 Distributive Justice. 217 7.4.1 Satisfaction and Compliance.218
xxii Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 7.4.2 Representing Legitimate Claims.219 7.4.3 Computing a Resource Allocation.219 7.4.4 Self-Organising the Weights .221 7.4.5 Some Experimental Results.223 Retributive Justice.226 7.5.1 Experimental Setting. 227 7.5.2 Policy Specification. 229 7.5.3 Experimental Results. 231 Procedural Justice.232 7.6.1 Participation Principle. 234 7.6.2 Transparency Principle and Balancing Principle.238 7.6.3 Procedural Justice: On Reflection.240 A General Framework. 241 Summary.242 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 Chapter 8. 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 Artificial Social Construction 245 Introduction.245 Example: The Cheese-and-Wine Controversy . 247 Trust. 248 8.3.1 Making Decisions Under Uncertainty . 249 8.3.2 A Socio-Cognitive Trust Framework. 251 8.3.3 Trust in a Producer-Consumer
Scenario.253 Forgiveness.253 8.4.1 Trust Breakdowns. 254 8.4.2 A Forgiveness Framework. 255 8.4.3 Forgiveness in Computer-Mediated Communication. 258 Electronic Social Capital. 259 8.5.1 Favours.259 8.5.2 Social Capital.260 8.5.3 A Social Capital Framework. 261 8.5.4 The Unscrupulous Diners’ Dilemma.264 Values. 265 8.6.1 Depreciating Values. 265 8.6.2 Reinventing Values . 268 Artificial Social Constructionism. 271 Summary.272
Contents Chapter 9. 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 Knowledge Aggregation 275 Introduction.275 Example: The Kitchen Aggravation.277 Judgement Aggregation. 279 9.3.1 The Condorcet Jury Theorem.279 9.3.2 The Doctrinal Paradox.281 Opinion Formation. 284 9.4.1 Hegselmann-Krause Model.285 9.4.2 Ramirez-Cano-Pitt Model.285 Social Networks. 286 9.5.1 Networks: Some Definitions and Metrics. 287 9.5.2 Ring and All-to-All Networks .289 9.5.3 Random Graphs (Erdös-Rényi) Networks. 291 9.5.4 Small-World (Watts-Strogatz) Networks. 292 9.5.5 Scale-Free (Barabási-Albert) Networks. 293 A Framework for Interactional Justice.295 9.6.1 Individual Self-Assessment.295 9.6.2 Collective Assessment.297 9.6.3 Implementation. 298 Experiments with Interactional Justice.300 9.7.1 Economy of
Scarcity. 301 9.7.2 ‘Clique’ Detection and Protection. 302 9.7.3 Network Variations. 305 Summary.307 Chapter 10. Algorithmic Self-Governance 10.1 10.2 10.3 xxiii 311 Introduction.311 Example: The Ministry of Culinary Affairs. 313 Knowledge Management. 315 10.3.1 Knowledge Management in Classical Athens. 315 10.3.2 Facts, Policies and Values.317 10.4 Relevant Expertise Aggregation.320 10.5 The Tolerance of Dissent. 322
xxiv Self-Organising Multi-Agent Systems 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9 Basic Democracy and Demopolis.324 10.6.1 Basic Democracy . 325 10.6.2 Demopolis. 327 10.6.3 SimDemopolis. 328 Experiments with SimDemopolis. 330 10.7.1 Civic Participation . 330 10.7.2 Legislation.336 10.7.3 Entrenchment.338 Algorithmic Comparative Politics .341 Summary: Why This Stuff Matters. 344 Bibliography 347 Index 369 |
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id | DE-604.BV047659728 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:52:11Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:18:33Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781800610422 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033044579 |
oclc_num | 1304477076 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-739 DE-703 |
owner_facet | DE-739 DE-703 |
physical | xxiv, 375 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | World Scientific |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Pitt, Jeremy Verfasser (DE-588)1060772671 aut Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism Jeremy Pitt New Jersey ; London ; Singapore ; Beijing ; Shanghai ; Hong Kong ; Taipei ; Chennai ; Tokyo World Scientific [2022] xxiv, 375 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index Intelligent agents (Computer software) Electronic data processing Distributed processing Mehragentensystem (DE-588)4389058-1 gnd rswk-swf Selbstorganisation (DE-588)4126830-1 gnd rswk-swf Electronic books Selbstorganisation (DE-588)4126830-1 s Mehragentensystem (DE-588)4389058-1 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-80061-043-9 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-80061-044-6 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 1-80061-043-2 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033044579&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Pitt, Jeremy Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism Intelligent agents (Computer software) Electronic data processing Distributed processing Mehragentensystem (DE-588)4389058-1 gnd Selbstorganisation (DE-588)4126830-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4389058-1 (DE-588)4126830-1 |
title | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism |
title_auth | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism |
title_exact_search | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism |
title_exact_search_txtP | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism |
title_full | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism Jeremy Pitt |
title_fullStr | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism Jeremy Pitt |
title_full_unstemmed | Self-organising multi-agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism Jeremy Pitt |
title_short | Self-organising multi-agent systems |
title_sort | self organising multi agent systems algorithmic foundations of cyber anarcho socialism |
title_sub | algorithmic foundations of cyber-anarcho-socialism |
topic | Intelligent agents (Computer software) Electronic data processing Distributed processing Mehragentensystem (DE-588)4389058-1 gnd Selbstorganisation (DE-588)4126830-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Intelligent agents (Computer software) Electronic data processing Distributed processing Mehragentensystem Selbstorganisation |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033044579&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT pittjeremy selforganisingmultiagentsystemsalgorithmicfoundationsofcyberanarchosocialism |