Argumentation in Multi-Agent Systems [electronic resource] : Second International Workshop, ArgMAS 2005 Utrecht, The Netherlands, July 26, 2005 Revised Selected and Invited Papers / edited by Simon Parsons, Nicolas Maudet, Pavlos Moraitis, Iyad Rahwan.
Series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 4049Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006Description: XIV, 313 p. online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783540363569
- Computer science
- Computer communication systems
- User interfaces (Computer systems)
- Artificial intelligence
- Computational linguistics
- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)
- Computer Communication Networks
- User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction
- Language Translation and Linguistics
- 006.3 23
- Q334-342
- TJ210.2-211.495

Invited Lecture -- The Case of Pragma-Dialectics -- Foundations -- A Logic of Abstract Argumentation -- On the Meta-logic of Arguments -- Nested Argumentation and Its Application to Decision Making over Actions -- Testing Formal Dialectic -- Negotiation -- Formal Handling of Threats and Rewards in a Negotiation Dialogue -- Argument-Based Negotiation in a Social Context -- Practical Strategic Reasoning and Adaptation in Rational Argument-Based Negotiation -- A Protocol for Arguing About Rejections in Negotiation -- Protocols -- New Types of Inter-agent Dialogues -- Argumentation Based Modelling of Embedded Agent Dialogues -- Liberalizing Protocols for Argumentation in Multi-agent Systems -- Protocol Synthesis with Dialogue Structure Theory -- Deliberation and Coalition Formation -- An Argumentation-Based Model for Reasoning About Coalition Structures -- Argumentation-Based Multi-agent Dialogues for Deliberation -- Consensus Formation -- Presentation of Arguments and Counterarguments for Tentative Scientific Knowledge -- Towards a Formal Framework for the Search of a Consensus Between Autonomous Agents -- Argumentation-Supported Information Distribution in a Multiagent System for Knowledge Management -- How Agents Alter Their Beliefs After an Argumentation-Based Dialogue.