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FIPA Modeling Technical Committee
The Modeling Technical Committee () was established to develop vendor-neutral common semantics, meta-model, and abstract syntax for agent-based methodologies.
Modeling TC Objectives
- To facilitate advances in the state of the art of agent-based modeling.
- To enable developers to better understand how to model agent-based applications, including large-scale multiagent systems.
- To recommend technology for adoption of common semantics, meta-model, and abstract syntax for agent-based development methodologies.
- To recommend technology for adoption that enable interoperability across the lifecycle of AUML tools designs/work products.
- To promote standard modeling techniques that increase rigor and consistency of specifications.
- To leverage and interoperate with specifications from FIPA and other standards organizations.
- To liaise with other appropriate organizations.
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Latest Updates
FIPA has approved a to develop an AUML standard.
Work currently underway. See .
A FIPA Methodologies TC has also been approved by FIPA. To view their work plan, see
Resolutions from Feb 2003 Palermo meeting
The Modelling TC participants determined that a primary goal of FIPA AUML is to be domain independent. Initially, we will examine areas the TC currently has expertise: service-oriented architecture (SOA), business process management (BPM), simulation, real-time, AOSE, robotics, information systems. Other areas will be examined over time as we can.
The Modelling TC participants have initially identified thirteen sources of notations that should be considered for a FIPA AUML: UML 2.0, AOR, PASSI, MESSAGE, Tropos (includes i* and GRL), Adelphi, Gaia, Brixs, Styx, Prometheus, Madkit, OPEN, OPM. A one-to-two page summary of each will be produced for public view by 12 March 2003. The Modelling TC participants have initially identified twelve modelling areas that should be explored for a FIPA AUML: multi- vs. single agent, agent “class/component” and implementation structure, goal and soft goals, use cases, social aspects, environment, workflow/planning, levels of abstraction, temporal constraints, policies, deployment and mobility. For due dates, see . The Modelling TC participants have initially identified useful existing diagram types that the FIPA AUML might use and extend: class, component, sequence, deployment, state chart, use cases, and activity diagrams, coloured Petri nets.