DocumentCode
2343696
Title
Agent Autonomy: Social Integrity and Social Independence
Author
Huber, Marcus J.
Author_Institution
Intelligent Reasoning Syst., Oceanside, CA
fYear
2007
fDate
2-4 April 2007
Firstpage
282
Lastpage
290
Abstract
As interactions between agents become more common, it will become very important to be able to characterize and perhaps even guarantee an agent´s level of autonomy. We will both want agents to perform tasks on their own while at the same time both remaining controllable by ourselves and secure from control and manipulation by others. Most intuitions of autonomy seem to involve the notion that it is related to dependence/independence. Our model of autonomy captures the notion that, in one sense, autonomy represents security from corruption and manipulation by external influences (i.e., its social integrity). Another aspect of our model captures that autonomy also represents an agent´s ability to perform its tasks without dependence upon others, (i.e., its social independence). This paper therefore presents a multidimensional conceptualization of autonomy and introduces a pragmatic interpretation of our scheme that is applicable to the characterization of the autonomy level of any software entity but which is especially amenable to agent-based systems
Keywords
automation; multi-agent systems; agent autonomy; agent-based systems; multidimensional autonomy conceptualization; pragmatic interpretation; social independence; social integrity; Amorphous materials; Autonomous agents; Decision making; Filters; Humans; Intelligent agent; Intelligent systems; Multidimensional systems; Security;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Technology, 2007. ITNG '07. Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Las Vegas, NV
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2776-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ITNG.2007.29
Filename
4151698
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