2016
Conférence
In: Baldoni, M., Chopra, A., Son, T., Hirayama, K., Torroni, P. (eds) PRIMA 2016: Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent Systems. PRIMA 2016. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 9862. Springer, Cham
Since 1990, there has been a striking increase in using multi-agent systems to study renewable resources management systems. The ultimate objective is to contribute to decisions support on resources management. The adopted strategic decisions are always joined with access to resources norms. However, the defined norms are statics and suppose that all agents are not autonomous and always obey to the underlying norms which do not reflect reality. In previous work, we proposed ML-MA , a multi-level multi-agent architecture to support renewable resources management systems modeling. In this work, we focus on the integration of normative aspects in our architecture. Our approach is illustrated using “Ouled Chehida” case study from Tunisian pastoral context.
@InProceedings{10.1007/978-3-319-44832-9_21,author="H{\`e}nane, Islemand Hadouaj, Samehand Gh{\'e}dira, Khaledand Ferchichi, Ali",editor="Baldoni, Matteoand Chopra, Amit K.and Son, Tran Caoand Hirayama, Katsutoshiand Torroni, Paolo",title="Modeling Organizational and Institutional Aspects in Renewable and Natural Resources Management Context",booktitle="PRIMA 2016: Principles and Practice of Multi-Agent Systems",year="2016",publisher="Springer International Publishing",address="Cham",pages="333--343",abstract="Since 1990, there has been a striking increase in using multi-agent systems to study renewable resources management systems. The ultimate objective is to contribute to decisions support on resources management. The adopted strategic decisions are always joined with access to resources norms. However, the defined norms are statics and suppose that all agents are not autonomous and always obey to the underlying norms which do not reflect reality. In previous work, we proposed ML-MA [1], a multi-level multi-agent architecture to support renewable resources management systems modeling. In this work, we focus on the integration of normative aspects in our architecture. Our approach is illustrated using ``Ouled Chehida'' case study from Tunisian pastoral context.",isbn="978-3-319-44832-9"}