Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

KQML as an agent communication language

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Citations

16

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The ARPA Knowledge Sharing Effort aims to develop techniques and methodology for building large‑scale, sharable, and reusable knowledge bases. This paper describes the design and experimentation of KQML, a new language and protocol for exchanging information and knowledge. KQML is a message format and protocol that defines extensible performatives for agent speech acts, provides a basic architecture with communication facilitators, and is used in prototype systems for concurrent engineering, intelligent design, and planning and scheduling.

Abstract

This paper describes the design of and experimentation with the Knowledge Query and Manipulation Language (KQML), a new language and protocol for exchanging information and knowledge. This work is part of a larger effort, the ARPA Knowledge Sharing Effort which is aimed at developing techniques and methodology for building large-scale knowledge bases which are sharable and reusable. KQML is both a message format and a message-handling protocol to support run-time knowledge sharing among agents. KQML focuses on an extensible set of performatives, which defines the permissible "speech acts" agents may use and comprise a substrate on which to develop higher-level models of interagent interaction such as contract nets and negotiation. In addition, KQML provides a basic architecture for knowledge sharing through a special class of agent called communication facilitors which coordinate the interactions of other agents. The ideas which underlie the evolving design of KQML are currently being explored through experimental prototype systems which are being used to support several testbeds in such areas as concurrent engineering, intelligent design and intelligent planning and scheduling.

References

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