Ontological aspects of the implementation of norms in agent-based electronic institutions

Davide Grossi, Huib Aldewereld, Javier Vázquez-Salceda, Frank Dignum

Research output: Chapter in Book / Report / Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In order to regulate different circumstances over an extensive period of time, norms in institutions are stated in a vague and often ambiguous manner, thereby abstracting from concrete aspects, which are relevant for the operationalisation of institutions. If agent-based electronic institutions, which adhere to a set of abstract requirements, are to be built, how can those requirements be translated into more concrete constraints, the impact of which can be described directly in the institution? We address this issue considering institutions as normative systems based on articulate ontologies of the agent domain they regulate. Ontologies, we hold, are used by institutions to relate the abstract concepts in which their norms are formulated, to their concrete application domain. In this view, different institutions can implement the same set of norms in different ways as far as they presuppose divergent ontologies of the concepts in which that set of norms is formulated. In this paper we analyse this phenomenon introducing a notion of contextual ontology. We will focus on the formal machinery necessary to characterise it as well.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAISB'05 Convention: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents - Proceedings of the Symposium on Normative Multi-Agent Systems
Pages104-116
Publication statusPublished - 2005
Externally publishedYes
Event1st International Symposium on Normative Multiagent Systems, NorMAS 2005, Part of AISB'05 Convention: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents - , United Kingdom
Duration: 12 Apr 200515 Apr 2005

Conference

Conference1st International Symposium on Normative Multiagent Systems, NorMAS 2005, Part of AISB'05 Convention: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
Period12/04/0515/04/05

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