Title :
GRATE: a general framework for co-operative problem solving
Author :
Jennings, N.R. ; Mamdani, E.H. ; Laresgoiti, I. ; Perez, J. ; Corera, J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. Eng., Queen Mary & Westfield Coll., London, UK
Abstract :
As the deployment of expert systems has spread into more complex and sophisticated environments, so inherent technological limitations have been observed. As a technique for overcoming this complexity barrier, researchers have started to build systems composed of multiple co-operating components. These systems fall into two distinct categories; those that solve a particular problem, such as speech recognition or vehicle monitoring, and those that are general to some extent. GRATE is a general framework, which enables an application builder to construct multi-agent systems for the domain of industrial process control. Unlike other frameworks, GRATE embodies a significant amount of inbuilt knowledge related to co-operation and control which can be utilised during system building. This approach offers a paradigm shift for the construction of multi-agent systems, in which the role of configuring pre-existing knowledge becomes an integral component. Instead of starting afresh, the designer can utilise the in-built knowledge and augment it, if necessary, with domain-specific information. The GRATE architecture has a clear separation of concerns, and has been applied to real-world problems in the domains of electricity transportation management and diagnosis of a particle accelerator beam controller
Keywords :
expert systems; problem solving; process computer control; co-operative problem solving; domain-specific information; expert systems; general framework; industrial process control; multi-agent systems; multiple co-operating components; paradigm shift; pre-existing knowledge;
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Systems Engineering