GB2366398A - A method of and system for creating a group or collective agent - Google Patents

A method of and system for creating a group or collective agent Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2366398A
GB2366398A GB0020981A GB0020981A GB2366398A GB 2366398 A GB2366398 A GB 2366398A GB 0020981 A GB0020981 A GB 0020981A GB 0020981 A GB0020981 A GB 0020981A GB 2366398 A GB2366398 A GB 2366398A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
agent
group
agents
new
creating
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB0020981A
Other versions
GB0020981D0 (en
GB2366398B (en
Inventor
Ronnie Taib
David Bonnefoy-Cudraz
Andrew Aftelak
Dragan Boscovic
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Motorola Solutions Inc
Original Assignee
Motorola Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Motorola Inc filed Critical Motorola Inc
Priority to GB0020981A priority Critical patent/GB2366398B/en
Publication of GB0020981D0 publication Critical patent/GB0020981D0/en
Priority to AU2001277537A priority patent/AU2001277537A1/en
Priority to PCT/EP2001/008155 priority patent/WO2002017132A2/en
Publication of GB2366398A publication Critical patent/GB2366398A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2366398B publication Critical patent/GB2366398B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F9/00Arrangements for program control, e.g. control units
    • G06F9/06Arrangements for program control, e.g. control units using stored programs, i.e. using an internal store of processing equipment to receive or retain programs
    • G06F9/46Multiprogramming arrangements
    • G06F9/48Program initiating; Program switching, e.g. by interrupt
    • G06F9/4806Task transfer initiation or dispatching
    • G06F9/4843Task transfer initiation or dispatching by program, e.g. task dispatcher, supervisor, operating system
    • G06F9/485Task life-cycle, e.g. stopping, restarting, resuming execution
    • G06F9/4856Task life-cycle, e.g. stopping, restarting, resuming execution resumption being on a different machine, e.g. task migration, virtual machine migration
    • G06F9/4862Task life-cycle, e.g. stopping, restarting, resuming execution resumption being on a different machine, e.g. task migration, virtual machine migration the task being a mobile agent, i.e. specifically designed to migrate
    • G06F9/4875Task life-cycle, e.g. stopping, restarting, resuming execution resumption being on a different machine, e.g. task migration, virtual machine migration the task being a mobile agent, i.e. specifically designed to migrate with migration policy, e.g. auction, contract negotiation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/01Protocols
    • H04L67/10Protocols in which an application is distributed across nodes in the network
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L69/00Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
    • H04L69/30Definitions, standards or architectural aspects of layered protocol stacks
    • H04L69/32Architecture of open systems interconnection [OSI] 7-layer type protocol stacks, e.g. the interfaces between the data link level and the physical level
    • H04L69/322Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions
    • H04L69/329Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions in the application layer [OSI layer 7]

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Software Systems (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer And Data Communications (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
  • Hardware Redundancy (AREA)

Abstract

Agents which act on behalf of a system user or group of such users are able to create a further agent representative of a number of overlapping or shared characteristics (shared by a subset of agents within the system). Agents contain both public and private information and act as communication filters. Agents facilitate the formation of group culture in distributed communication systems such as the internet and cellular phone networks.

Description

1 2366398 AGENTS This invention relates to agents. More specifically, this
invention relates to the creation of group or collective agents by and/or from other agents.
For the purposes of this disclosure, the term agent is used to represent an entity which acts on behalf of a system user or a group of such users. Examples of systems within which one or more agents may be employed are cellular communications systems, the internet, internet service providers and internet chat
10 room systems. It should be appreciated that this invention is by no means restricted to these examples.
It is apparent that people, especially younger people, experience a cultural and psychological need to belong, either formally or informally, to groups. Such 15 groups may include groups of friends, members of a club or society, members of a particular organisation, supporters of a particular sports team or personality, supporters of a particular movement and fans of a popular music group, etc.
In contrast to their need to belong, people also feel the need to express 20 their individuality within the groups to which they belong. It is often of particular importance that people, especially younger people, are true to their particular beliefs, and are seen to be so by others.
Such social needs are experienced in many, if not all, aspects of modern 25 life. Therefore, there is a requirement for support for, and the fulfilment of, Such needs within the technologies upon which the modern way of life is founded, and along side which the modern way of life is developing. At the present time there is no provision for the support of a group culture amongst mobile communication devices and other analogous systems. In addition, the improvement of group 30 culture support within internet services and systems and the like is perceived to be necessary. The problem experienced with all such technologies is that they do not readily support, or provide facilities for, the grouping together of people, even though the formation of such groups is an inherent desire and need of the users of modern technologies and systems.
The present invention addresses some or all of the above disadvantages. 5 In accordance with the present invention, there is provided, as claimed in the appendent claims, a method of and a system for creating a group or collective agent.
10 The group or collective agent may be created from a set of agents and may comprise a set of characteristics. The characteristics may be divided into one or more subsets, which may include private information which is not to be divulged, public information which may be freely dispersed, and restricted public information which may be dispersed to a limited group determined in accordance with selected 15 criteria.
Preferably, the method may include the steps of determining a set of characteristics to be implanted in a new group agent, creating a new agent entity, initialising the new agent entity with the chosen set of characteristics, and running 20 the new group or collective agent.
The method may further include the steps of: an agent within a set of agents sending a message to the other agents within the set, and the agents receiving a response from the other agents within that set. The message may 25 comprise a proposal for a new group which is desired to be created, and the conditions for membership of that group. The responses received by the agent making the proposal may indicate whether each agent in the set is desirous of being a member of the proposed group. Further, the method may comprise the steps of the agent which proposed a new group determining which agents are to 30 be added to the new group, and initiating the creation of a new agent entity.
Further, a method according to the invention may include the steps of at least one agent within a set of agents sending a request to a grouping agent also resident within the set, the grouping agent accumulating all such requests, and at an appropriate time forming a new group and initiating the creation of a new agent entity. The request may detail which characteristic or characteristics the agent is desirous of sharing with others.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the method may be implemented in the form of computer program means located on a computer readable medium which, when loaded in a computer, is operative to carry out the method of the present invention. This provides the advantage of 10 portability of the method amongst systems and users.
Also in accordance with the present invention there is provided a system for creating a group or collective agent, comprising: at least two agent entities communicably connected via a message exchange stream; a central control unit; 15 and wherein each agent entity comprises: receiver means for receiving messages transmitted by the central control unit and/or one or more agent entities; and a send module for sending messages to the central control unit and/or one or more agent entities; and at least one agent entity comprises means for initiating the creation of and/or creating a group or collective agents.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the means for initiating and/or creating comprises: a proposal and conditions generation engine; a transmitter for transmitting the proposal and conditions selectively; means for determining which of the recipients should be group members; and 25 means for rolling out a new group agent.
Preferably, membership is determined in accordance with which recipients desire membership and which of those recipients desirous of membership satisfy the conditions therefor, In accordance with a further preferred embodiment of the present invention, the means for initiating and/or creating comprises a sub- system for receiving and/or storing requests that a group agent be created; a module for determining whether a requested agent should be created and for determining group characteristics and membership; and a mechanism for rolling out a new group agent.
5 Preferably, the sub-system for determining characteristics and membership adds prospective members to a group and only removes them if they reject the group characteristics.
Preferably, the at least two agents are physically connected or are connected via an air interface.
Additional specific advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description and figures, in which:
15 Figure 1 shows an exemplary agent in accordance with the present invention; Figures 2A to C illustrate a first mechanism, according to the present invention, for the creation of a group or collective agent; Figure 3 depicts the signalling taking place between the entities involved during the mechanism of Figure 2; Figure 4 shows the interaction of two agents within a system during the mechanism of Figure 2; Figures 5A and B show a second mechanism, according to the present invention, for the creation of a group or collective agent; 25 Figure 6 depicts the interaction of two agents with a grouping agent during the mechanism of Figure 5; Figure 7 shows exemplary signalling taking place between a set of agents and a grouping agent during the operation of the mechanism of Figure 5; and Figure 8 shows a flow diagram depicting the creation of a group agent.
The present invention is now described with reference to the accompanying drawings as detailed above.
As may be seen in Figure 1, an agent 102 of this invention is defined by a set of characteristics 104. As an example, if the agent is representative of a human user of a particular system, the set of characteristics may comprise the preferences of that user relating to the system. It should be noted that the system 5 in which the agent is employed is unnecessary to the understanding of this invention.
The agent characteristics 104 have a hierarchical class structure. The hierarchy is based upon the privacy of the information contained within the 10 characteristics of the agent. In this regard, a subset 106 of the characteristics will be completely confidential, and a second subset 108 of the characteristics will contain public information. Additionally, the public subset 108 may contain a further subset 110 of information which may only be divulged to other, agents failing within pre-set criteria. Returning to the example of a human user of a 15 system, the private subset 106 may comprise credit card details, whilst the public subset may comprise the agent's name and a further subset 110, regulated by the condition that the contained information may be divulged only to the members of a group named "friends". The further subset I 10 may comprise the human user's name.
When a number of agents contain public information, i.e. information which they are prepared to disclose per se from their set of characteristics, it becomes possible to create new agents which have a set of characteristics based upon the characteristics of the original agents, or a group thereof. The newly formed agent 25 is termed a group or collective agent, and its set of characteristics is representative of the group of agents from which it was created.
In order to create an agent which is representative of a group of agents, it must be determined which agents will be a part of the newly created group. There 30 are two mechanisms which may be utilised to determine which agents do, or wish to, belong to a specific group. The first mechanism is a distributed mechanism wherein a set of agents choose the members of a new group amongst themselves. The second mechanism is a centralised mechanism in which one or more specialised or grouping agents select the members of a new group. These mechanism are described in detail hereinafter.
Figures 2A to C, 3 and 4 illustrate how a set of agents determines which 5 members of the set are, or should be, a part of a new group which is to be formed. The set 202 of agents in this case comprises all agents present in the system at the time of interest. Firstly, an agent (A) takes the initiative to create a new group. The agent (A) initiating the process may be any one of the agents within the set of agents which has the ability to do so. That particular agent (A) is then responsible 10 for the creation of the new group.
In order that an agent has the ability to initiate the creation of a new group, it must have been given 302 the capability to create, or request the creation of, a new agent. It must have been given 304 the ability to determine the 15 characteristics of a new group agent, and it must have been given 306 the right to create a new group agent. Such capabilities are provided 400 to an agent during its creation, or at a later stage, by a central controller of the system, an agent creation engine used to create the agents initially forming the set of agents, or some other suitable entity.
The agent (A) responsible for the creation of a new group sends 406 a message 204 to the remainder of the set of agents 202. As stated above, the set comprises all agents in this example. However, the set may be limited by characteristic, i.e. only agents which specify (in their characteristics or 25 preferences) an interest in sports may have a message sent to them. The message contains a proposal that a new group (G) be created, and a number of associated conditions for membership of the new group. The agents (13, C, D, E, F) to which the message was sent return a response to the initiating agent (A) which it receives 402 and processes. This response indicates a willingness 206 to 30 be added to the new group (G), or a refusal 208 so to be (Figure 213). Upon receipt of these responses, the responsible agent (A) decides which agents should be added to the new group of base-ball fans and creates 308 a new agent (G) which describes the characteristics of the created group. This agent (G) is the group or collective agent.
In order to make the decision of which of the agents expressing a desire to 5 be members of the new group should indeed be included, the responsible agent considers the membership conditions of the group and determines 404 whether those agents satisfy them. If the conditions are satisfied by an agent, it is added to the group, otherwise it is rejected. The agent responsible for the creation of a group may use any criteria and means to accept or refuse a member.
Figures 5A and B, 6 and 7 depict the operation of a centralised mechanism. The set of agents in this case resembles the set of agents described with reference to the distributed mechanism above, differing only in that an additional specialised or grouping agent (SPA) is present. This grouping agent is 15 responsible for the creation of new groups.
As may be seen, any agent (excepting the grouping agent) within the set 500 may send a request 502 to the grouping agent (SPA), the request detailing which characteristics that agent is desirous of sharing with other agents. The 20 grouping agent accumulates 604 all the requests made to it by agents within the set and, when appropriate, creates 504 a new group agent (G). The determination of when is suitable for a new group agent to be created is performed in accordance with an algorithm 606 resident within the grouping agent (SPA). Such an algorithm is implementation dependent. Two exemplary algorithms are set forth 25 below. It should be appreciated that the invention is in no way limited to these two specific algorithms.
Example 1:
IF Number of identical > threshold THEN create a new requests (602) group Example 2:
IF Request received THEN poll (via send module 608) all agents in set for characteristics, then create new group choosing suitable agents The actual creation of a group agent is now described with reference to Figure 8. The process is highly dependent upon the agent technology being used, but in a preferred embodiment follows the following steps. Function box 802 5 illustrates the step of determining the set of characteristics to be implanted in a new group agent. The set of characteristics and the hierarchical structure of the agent will differ depending upon the purpose for which it is created. As an example, it is unlikely that an agent created to group together the names of supporters of Marseille Football Club who reside in the South of France would 10 contain a private sub-section of characteristics. In contrast, an agent created to group together user's bank details and financial interests would be unlikely to contain much information in the wholly public sub-section of characteristics.
Each group agent created is able to retain only a portion of the overlapping 15 characteristics of the agents which form the group. All non- overlapping characteristics are discarded. As such, several agents may be created for the same group, each newly created group agent comprising a specific combination of the common characteristics of the members of the group. Of course, if the quantity of overlapping characteristics and the number of group members is very 20 small, a single group agent will be sufficient to retain all such information. In order to avoid duplication of group agents, the agent responsible for the creation of the group agent manages the selection of the set of characteristics of the newly created group agent. Management of this selection must be performed in such a way as to receive the agreement of all members of the group.
As an example, the SPA may determine that the characteristics of a group agent are the overlapping public characteristics of the group members. These characteristics may then be sent to each member of the group. If any members of the group reject this set of characteristics, they will be removed from the group Once the set of characteristics to be implanted in a new group agent has been determined, a new agent entity is created (function box 804). The form and construction of this entity is entirely implementation dependent and may take the form of an object in the Java programming language for example. In such a case, 5 i.e. wherein the agents etc. are implemented in software, the method of the present invention may be provided in the form of computer program means storable and/or stored on a computer readable medium such as a floppy disk, a CID ROM or a conventional ROM chip, for example. The loading and/or activation of such computer program means would then cause to be carried out the method 10 of the present invention.
After the creation of an agent entity, the entity is initialised and the predetermined character set is implanted (function box 806). Finally, the new agent is triggered and allowed to run or function in the system (function box 808).
In some cases, it may be useful for group agents to be susceptible to grouping amongst themselves. However, in other cases it may be paramount that the group agents should be a final such agent and should not be able to group further. This latter case may be so if the list of group members has been 20 specifically chosen by the agent responsible for the creation of the group. It is decided whether a group agent may group further during the creation of that group agent. If a group agent is able to group further, it may do so through either of the above mechanisms in the same way as any normal (single user) agent. If it is not allowed to group further, the new group agent is inhibited from doing so. Such an 25 inhibition is achieved by denying the agent one of the three capabilities (set forth above) required to enable further grouping.
Similarly, there is provided an apparatus and system, as shown in Figures 4 and 6, comprising the means to carry out the method detailed above. As may be 30 seen, agents may reside within computers, mobile telephones etc., and communication between agents and between agents and a central controller (for example) may be by means of radio link, via the internet, or by other analogous means.
The use of the method described above within a system, whatever that system may be, to provide a foundation for a group culture within that system will provide distinct advantages. The ability of this method to accommodate requests 5 from a single agent and translate them into a new group which is overseen by its own agent entity allows the most diverse grouping needs and desires of a system's users to be provided for. Additionally, the creation of an agent for a new group, in such a way as to enhance the synergy of the group identity and to exclude characteristics from individual agents which are not pertinent to the group, 10 allows that agent to represent group interests which are dynamically evolving. For example, it is feasible that, should the characteristics of a group member change such that it no longer satisfies the criteria set for group membership, it may be expelled from the group either by the group agent or the agent responsible for the creation of the group agent.
It is clear to see that this method and system, and its inherent advantages, will pay particular dividends when utilised within cellular communications systems. An agent would then represent each mobile subscriber or user equipment thereby allowing dynamic grouping between system users to occur, providing access to 20 information required or desired, and allowing contact to be made between like minded users or users with common interests, etc. It is similarly clear that the same is true for analogous systems including, electronic mail systems, internet service providers and radio paging systems, etc.
25 A further advantage of the use of the above method is evident in the creation of a group agent in order to group the task processing of a number of agents. Several agents, all of which perform the same task, may create a group agent to perform the task once only and report the result to the group members.
In the above example of cellular communications, this would result in a reduction 30 in bandwidth consumption.
It will be appreciated that, whilst this invention has been described with reference to a software implementation of agent technology, perhaps via base station systems of a cellular communications system, it applies equally to a hardware or physical implementation. Similarly, it will be appreciated that this invention applies equally to all currently known forms of agent.
5 It will of course be understood that the present invention has been described above by way of example only, and that modifications of detail can be made within the scope of this invention.

Claims (26)

1. A method of creating a group or collective agent.
5
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the group or collective agent is created from a set of agents.
3. A method as claimed in either of claims 1 or 2, wherein the group or collective agent comprises a set of characteristics.
4. A method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the characteristics are divided into one or more subsets.
5. A method as claimed in claim 4, wherein the subsets include private 15 information not to be divulged, public information for dispersal, and restricted public information of limited dispersal according to selected criteria.
6. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, comprising the steps of:
determining a set of characteristics to be implanted in a new group agent; creating a new agent entity; initialising the new agent entity with the chosen set of characteristics; and running the new group or collective agent.
7. A method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the step of determining a set of characteristics comprises the steps of: an agent within a set of agents sending a message to the other agents within the set; and the agent receiving a response from the other agents within that set.
8. A method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the message comprises:
a proposal that a new group be created; and the conditions for membership of the group.
9. A method as claimed in either of claims 7 or 8, wherein the responses received indicate whether each agent in the set is desirous of being a member of the proposed new group.
10. A method as claimed in claim 9, further comprising the steps of:
the agent which proposed a new group determining which agents are to be added to the new group; and initiating the creation of a new agent entity.
11. A method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the step of determining a set of characteristics comprises the steps of: at least one agent within a set of agents sending a request to a grouping agent also resident within the set; the grouping agent accumulating all such requests; and 15 at an appropriate time, the grouping agent forming a group and initiating the creation of a new agent entity.
12. A method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the request details which characteristics the agent is desirous of sharing.
13. A method as claimed in any one of claims 2 to 12, wherein the set of agents comprises all agents present in the system.
14. A method as claimed in any of claims 2 to 12, wherein the set of agents 25 comprises a subset of all agents present in a system, the subset formed in accordance with at least one criterion.
15. A computer readable medium having thereon computer program means which, when loaded on a computer, are operative to carry out the method of any preceding claim.
16. An apparatus utilising the method of any of claims 1 to 14.
17. A system utilising the method of claims 1 to 14.
18. A system for creating a group or collective agent, comprising:
at least two agent entities communicably connected via a message exchange stream; a central control unit; and wherein each agent entity comprises: receiver means for receiving one or more messages transmitted by the central control unit and/or one or more agent entities; and 10 a send module for sending one or more messages to the central control unit and/or one or more agent entities; and wherein at least one agent entity comprises means for initiating the creation of and/or creating a group or collective agent.
19. A system as claimed in claim 18, wherein the means for initiating and/or creating comprises: a proposal and conditions generation engine; a transmitter for transmitting the proposal and conditions selectively; means for determining which of the recipients should be group members; and a mechanism for rolling out a new group agent.
20. A system as claimed in claim 19, wherein membership is determined in accordance with:
which recipients desire membership; and which of those recipients satisfy the conditions for membership.
21. A system as claimed in claim 18, wherein means for initiating and/or creating comprises:
a sub-system for receiving and/or storing requests that a group agent be created; a module for determining whether a requested agent should be created and for determining group characteristics and membership; and a mechanism for rolling out a new group agent.
22. A system as claimed in claim 21, wherein the means for determining characteristics and membership adds prospective members to a group and only removes them if they reject the group characteristics.
23. A system as claimed in any of claims 18 to 22, wherein the at least two agents are physically connected or are connected via an air interface.
24. A system as claimed in any of claims 18 to 23, wherein the system is a cellular communications system or an internet system such as an internet service provider (ISP).
25. A method of creating a group or collective agent substantially as 15 hereinbefore described with reference to Figures I to 8 of the accompanying drawings.
26. A system for creating a group or collective agent substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figures 1 to 8 of the accompanying drawings.
GB0020981A 2000-08-25 2000-08-25 Agents Expired - Lifetime GB2366398B (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0020981A GB2366398B (en) 2000-08-25 2000-08-25 Agents
AU2001277537A AU2001277537A1 (en) 2000-08-25 2001-07-16 Agents
PCT/EP2001/008155 WO2002017132A2 (en) 2000-08-25 2001-07-16 Agents

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0020981A GB2366398B (en) 2000-08-25 2000-08-25 Agents

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0020981D0 GB0020981D0 (en) 2000-10-11
GB2366398A true GB2366398A (en) 2002-03-06
GB2366398B GB2366398B (en) 2005-02-23

Family

ID=9898304

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB0020981A Expired - Lifetime GB2366398B (en) 2000-08-25 2000-08-25 Agents

Country Status (3)

Country Link
AU (1) AU2001277537A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2366398B (en)
WO (1) WO2002017132A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2003030051A1 (en) 2001-09-30 2003-04-10 Realcontacts Ltd Connection service

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5586218A (en) * 1991-03-04 1996-12-17 Inference Corporation Autonomous learning and reasoning agent
WO1999063458A1 (en) * 1998-05-29 1999-12-09 Sony Corporation Experience favorite information providing system
WO1999066381A2 (en) * 1998-06-15 1999-12-23 Dejima Corporation Adaptive interaction using an adaptive agent-oriented software architecture

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2001504609A (en) * 1996-11-14 2001-04-03 ミツビシ・エレクトリック・インフォメイション・テクノロジー・センター・アメリカ・インコーポレイテッド Dynamic Synchronization Alliance Framework for Mobile Agents

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5586218A (en) * 1991-03-04 1996-12-17 Inference Corporation Autonomous learning and reasoning agent
WO1999063458A1 (en) * 1998-05-29 1999-12-09 Sony Corporation Experience favorite information providing system
WO1999066381A2 (en) * 1998-06-15 1999-12-23 Dejima Corporation Adaptive interaction using an adaptive agent-oriented software architecture

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB0020981D0 (en) 2000-10-11
GB2366398B (en) 2005-02-23
WO2002017132A2 (en) 2002-02-28
AU2001277537A1 (en) 2002-03-04
WO2002017132A3 (en) 2003-07-10

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
KR101126974B1 (en) A method and arrangement for providing context information
US8364624B2 (en) Method and arrangement for content prioritization
JP4555537B2 (en) Chat message communication apparatus and method
CN101346974B (en) Dynamic resource matching device, apparatus, method and processing unit
US9614958B2 (en) Predictive computer network services provisioning for mobile users
US20100015976A1 (en) System and method for sharing rights-enabled mobile profiles
US8406792B2 (en) Message modification system and method
US20060136298A1 (en) Methods and apparatus for contextual advertisements in an online conversation thread
US20130132519A1 (en) Controlling quality of service and content quality based on user relationships
US20060235932A1 (en) Chat server mute capability
Cissée et al. An agent-based approach for privacy-preserving recommender systems
US20060168001A1 (en) Web site presence detector
AU2003233737A1 (en) Method and system for managing message-based applications and applications providers in a communications network
WO2012035149A1 (en) Social discovery network system and method based on mobile positioning
CN101631311A (en) Profile service for sharing rights-enabled mobile profiles
CN103098042A (en) System and method for social collection
WO2008066791A2 (en) System and method for creating ad-hoc virtual communities
CN105991408A (en) Message processing method, message processing device and processing server
CN105991407A (en) Message processing method, message processing device and processing server
CN103024864A (en) System and method for determining that a maximum number of IP sessions has been established
CN105247502A (en) Contextual display apparatus and methods
JP2010527197A (en) Method and apparatus for providing customized services in a communication network
GB2366398A (en) A method of and system for creating a group or collective agent
CN113254839B (en) Layer-by-layer message distribution method, electronic client and medium
Zhang et al. A privacy agent in context-aware ubiquitous computing environments

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)

Free format text: REGISTERED BETWEEN 20110120 AND 20110126

732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)

Free format text: REGISTERED BETWEEN 20170831 AND 20170906

PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Expiry date: 20200824