Next: About this document ... Up: Convention in Joint Activity Previous: List of Tables

Bibliography

1
Philip Agre.
Computation and Human Experience.
Cambridge University Press, 1997.

2
Philip E. Agre and David Chapman.
Pengi: An implementation of a theory of activity.
In Proceedings of the Sixth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 268-272, 1987.

3
Philip E. Agre and David Chapman.
What are plans for?
In Pattie Maes, editor, Designing Autonomous Agents: Theory and Practice from Biology to Engineering and Back, pages 17-34. MIT Press, Cambridge, 1990.

4
Richard Alterman.
Adaptive planning.
Cognitive Science, 12:393-421, 1988.

5
Richard Alterman.
Everyday reasoning.
Technical Report CS-97-193, Brandeis University, 1998.
To appear in Mind, Culture, and Activity.

6
Richard Alterman, Roland Zito-Wolf, and Tamitha Carpenter.
Interaction, comprehension, and instruction usage.
Journal of the Learning Sciences, 1(4):361-398, 1991.

7
Richard Alterman, Roland Zito-Wolf, and Tamitha Carpenter.
Pragmatic action.
Cognitive Science, 22(1):53-105, 1998.

8
Frederic Bartlett.
Remembering: A study in experimental and social psychology.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1932.

9
Rodney Brooks.
Intelligence without representation.
Artificial Intelligence, 47:139-159, 1991.

10
Jamie Carbonell.
Derivational analogy and its role in problem solving.
In Proceedings of the Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 1983.

11
David Chapman.
Planning for conjunctive goals.
Artificial Intelligence, 32(3):333-377, 1987.

12
William Clancey.
Situated action: A neuropsychological interpretation response to vera and simon.
Cognitive Science, 17:87-116, 1993.

13
Herbert H. Clark.
Using Language.
Cambridge University Press, NY, NY, 1996.

14
Michael Cole and Yrjö Engeström.
A cultural historic approach to distributed cognition.
In Gavriel Salomon, editor, Distributed Cognitions, pages 1-46. Cambridge University Press, 1993.

15
Daniel D. Corkill.
Hierarchical planning in a distributed environment.
In Proceedings of the Sixth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 168-175, 1979.

16
Randall Davis and Reid Smith.
Negotiation as a metaphor for distributed problem solving.
Artificial Intelligence, 20:63-109, 1983.

17
Edmund Durfee and Victor Lesser.
Using partial global plans to coordinate distributed problem solvers.
In Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 875-883, 1987.

18
Richard E. Fikes, Peter E. Hart, and Nils J. Nilsson.
Learning and executing generalized robot plans.
Artificial Intelligence, 3:251-288, 1972.

19
Richard E. Fikes and Nils J. Nilsson.
STRIPS: A new approach to the application of theorem proving to problem solving.
Artificial Intelligence, 2(3):189-208, 1971.

20
Douglas H. Fisher.
Knowledge acquisition via incremental conceptual clustering.
Machine Learning, 2:139-172, 1987.

21
David E. Foulser, Ming Li, and Qiang Yang.
Theory and algorithms for plan merging.
Artificial Intelligence, 57(2):43-181, 1992.

22
Harold Garfinkel.
Studies in Ethnomethodology.
Polity, 1967.

23
Andrew Garland.
Multi-agent learning through experience.
PhD thesis, Brandeis University, 1999.

24
Dedre Gentner.
Mechanisms of analogical learning.
In Vosniadou and Ortony, editors, Similarity and Analogical Reasoning, pages 199-241. Cambridge University Press, London, 1989.

25
Michael P. Georgeff.
The representation of events in multi-agent domains.
In Proceedings of the Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 125-129, 1983.

26
M. L. Gick and K. J. Holyoak.
Analogical problem solving.
Cognitive Psychology, 12:306-355, 1980.

27
M. L. Gick and K. J. Holyoak.
Schema induction and analogical transfer.
Cognitive Psychology, 15:1-38, 1983.

28
Ian Gold and Daniel Stoljar.
A neuron doctrine in the philosophy of neuroscience.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 22:To appear, 1999.

29
J. Greenbaum and M. Kyng, editors.
Design at work.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ, 1991.

30
James Greeno.
The situativity of knowing, learning, and research.
American Psychologist, 53:5-26, 1998.

31
James Greeno and Joyce Moore.
Situativity and symbols: Response to vera and simon.
Cognitive Science, 17:49-59, 1993.

32
Barbara Grosz and Sarit Kraus.
Collaborative plans for complex group action.
Artificial Intelligence, 86:269-357, 1996.

33
Barbara Grosz and Sarit Kraus.
The evolution of SharedPlans.
In A. Rao and M. Woolridge, editors, To appear in Foundations and Theories of Rational Agency. 1998.

34
Barbara Grosz and Candace Sidner.
Plans for discourse.
In Philip R. Cohen, Jerry Morgan, and Martha E. Pollack, editors, Intentions in Communication, pages 417-444. Bradford Books, Cambridge, MA, 1990.

35
Kristian J. Hammond.
Case-based planning: A framework for planning from experience.
Cognitive Science, 14:385-443, 1990.

36
Thomas Haynes and Sandip Sen.
Learning cases to resolve conflicts and improve group behavior.
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 48:31-49, 1998.

37
Marcus J. Huber and Edmund H. Durfee.
Deciding when to commit to action during observation-based coordination.
In Proc. First International Conference on Multiagent Systems, pages 163-170, 1995.

38
Marcus J. Huber and Tedd Hadley.
Multiple roles, multiple teams, dynamic environment: Autonomous netrek agents.
In W. Lewis Johnson, editor, Proceedings of the First International Conference on Autonomous Agents, New York, 1997. ACM Press.

39
Edward Hutchins.
How a cockpit remembers its speed.
Cognitive Science, 19:265-288, 1995.

40
Edwin Hutchins.
Learning to navigate.
In Seth Chaiklin and Jean Lave, editors, Understanding Practice, pages 35-63. Cambridge University Press, 1993.

41
Edwin Hutchins.
Cognition in the Wild.
MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1995.

42
Leslie Pack Kaelbling, Michael L. Littman, and Andrew W. Moore.
Reinforcement learning: A survey.
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 4, 1996.

43
Subbarao Kambhampati and James A. Hendler.
Control of refitting during plan reuse.
Artificial Intelligence, 55:193-258, 1992.

44
Craig A. Knoblock.
Learning abstraction hierarchies for problem solving.
In Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 923-928, 1990.

45
Janet L. Kolodner.
Case-Based Reasoning.
Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, San Mateo, CA, 1993.

46
Nicholas Kushmerick, Steve Hanks, and Daniel Weld.
An algorithm for probabilistic planning.
Artificial Intelligence, 76, 1995.

47
Pat Langley and John A. Allen.
Learning, memory, and search in planning.
In Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 364-369, Chicago, Illinois, 1991.

48
Jean Lave.
Cognition and Practice.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1988.

49
Jean Lave, Michael Murtaugh, and Olivia de la Rocha.
The dialectic of arithmetic in grocery shopping.
In Barbara Rogoff and Jean Lave, editors, Everyday Cognition, pages 9-40. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1984.

50
V.R. Lesser, R. D. Fennell, L. D. Erman, and D. R. Reddy.
Organization of the hearsay-ii speech understanding system.
IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, Signal Processing, 23:11-23, 1975.

51
Hector J. Levesque, Philip R. Cohen, and José H. T. Nunes.
On acting together.
In Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 94-99, July 1990.

52
David K. Lewis.
Convention: A philosophical study.
Harvard University Press, 1969.

53
Maja Mataric.
Designing emergent behaviors: From local interactions to collective intelligence.
In From Animals to Animats 2, pages 432-441, 1992.

54
John McCarthy.
Epistemological problems in articial intelligence.
In Proceedings of the Fifth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 1977.

55
M. Minsky.
A framework for representing knowledge.
In P.W. Winston, editor, The Psychology of Computer Vision, pages 211-277. McGraw-Hill, New York, NY, 1975.

56
S. Minton, J. G. Carbonell, C. A. Knoblock, D. R. Kuokka, O. Etzioni, and Y. Gil.
Explanation-based learning: A problem-solving perspective.
Artificial Intelligence, 40:63-118, 1989.

57
M V NagendraPrasad, Victor R. Lesser, and Susan Lander.
Retrieval and reasoning in distributed case bases.
Technical Report CS TR 95-27, University of Massachusetts, 1995.

58
Donald A. Norman.
The Psychology of Everyday Things.
Basic Books, 1988.

59
Takuya Ohko, Kazuo Hiraki, and Yuichiro Anzai.
Learning to reduce communication costs on task negotiation among multiple autonomous mobile robots.
In Gerhard Weiß and Sandip Sen, editors, Adaptation and Learning in Multi-Agent Systems, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, pages 177-190. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1996.

60
Martha Pollack.
Plans as complex mental attitudes.
In Philip Cohen, Jerry Morgan, and Martha Pollack, editors, Intentions in Communication, pages 77-103. MIT Press, 1990.

61
Ross Quillian.
Semantic memory.
In Marvin Minsky, editor, Semantic Information Processing, pages 227-270. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1968.

62
D.E. Rumelhart and J.L. McClelland.
Parallel Distributed Processing: Explorations in the Microstructures of Cognition (Vol. 1).
MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1986.

63
E. Sacerdoti.
Planning in a hierarchy of abstraction spaces.
Artificial Intelligence, 5:115-135, 1974.

64
H. Sacks, E. Schegloff, and G. Jefferson.
A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking in conversation.
Language, 50:696-735, 1974.

65
R. Schank and R. Abelson.
Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ, 1977.

66
Douglas Schuler and Aki Namioka, editors.
Participatory Design.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ, 1993.

67
Sandip Sen and Mahendra Sekaran.
Individual learning of coordination knowledge.
Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, 10, 1998.

68
Sandip Sen, Mahendra Sekaran, and John Hale.
Learning to coordinate without sharing information.
In Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, pages 426-431, 1994.

69
Peter Stone and Manuela Veloso.
Towards collaborative and adversarial learning: a case study in robotic soccer.
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 48:83-104, 1998.

70
Lucy A. Suchman.
Plans and Situated Actions.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987.

71
Toshiharu Sugawara.
Reusing past plans in distributed planning.
In Proc. First International Conference on Multiagent Systems, pages 360-367, 1995.

72
Milind Tambe.
Towards flexible teamwork.
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 7:83-124, 1997.

73
Manuela Veloso and Jaime Carbonell.
Derivational analogy in prodigy: Automating case acquisition, storage, and utilization.
Machine Learning, 10:249-278, 1993.

74
David Wilkens and Karen Myers.
A multiagent planning architecture.
In The Fourth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence Planning Systems, pages 154-162, 1998.

75
Terry Winograd.
Introduction.
In Terry Winograd, editor, Bringing Design to Software, pages xiii-xxv. Addison-Wesley, 1996.

76
Holly Yanco and Lynn Andrea Stein.
An adaptive communication protocol for cooperating mobile robots.
In Animals to Animats: Proc. of the Second Internation Conference on the Simulation of Adaptive Behavior, pages 478-485. MIT Press, 1993.



Last Update: March 10, 1999 by Andy Garland