lm2000.bib

@comment{{This file has been generated by bib2bib 1.99}}
@comment{{Command line: bib2bib -oc lm2000.keys -ob lm2000.bib -c 'export = "yes" and year=2000' lm.bib ../euprovenance.bib ../ops.bib}}
@comment{{This file has been generated by bib2bib 1.99}}
@comment{{Command line: bib2bib -ob lm.bib -oc lm.keys -c 'export = "yes"' ../lm.bib}}
@inproceedings{Moreau:HT2000,
  author = {Dave Millard and Luc Moreau and Hugh Davis and Sigi Reich},
  title = {{FOHM: A Fundamental Open Hypertext Model for Investigating
                  Interoperability between Hypertext Domains}},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh ACM Conference on  Hypertext and
                  Hypermedia HT'00},
  pages = {93--102},
  pagecount = {10},
  year = 2000,
  isbn = {1-58113-227-1},
  address = {San-Antonio, Texas},
  month = jun,
  pind = {EZ~04~03~04},
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254474/},
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/ht00.pdf},
  doi = {10.1145/336296.336334},
  export = {yes},
  abstract = {The Open Hypermedia Systems community has been largely concerned
              with interoperability between hypertext systems which share the
              same paradigm.  It has evolved a component based framework for
              this purpose, in which specific but incompatible middleware
              components are designed for each hypertext domain, such as
              navigational hypertext, spatial hypertext or taxonomic
              hypertext. This paper investigates the common features of these
              domains and introduces FOHM, a Fundamental Open Hypertext Model,
              which defines a common data model and set of related operations
              that are applicable for all three domains. Using this layer the
              paper explores the possible semantics of linking between
              different hypertext domains, and shows that each can introduce
              features which benefit the other domains.}
}
@inproceedings{Moreau:PAAM00,
  author = {Luc Moreau and Nick Gibbins and David DeRoure and Samhaa El-Beltagy and Wendy Hall and Gareth Hughes and Dan Joyce and Sanghee Kim and Danius Michaelides and Dave Millard and Sigi Reich and Robert Tansley and Mark Weal},
  title = {{SoFAR with DIM Agents: An Agent Framework for Distributed Information Management}},
  booktitle = {The Fifth International Conference and Exhibition on The
                  Practical Application of Intelligent Agents and
                  Multi-Agents},
  month = apr,
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254480/},
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/sofar.pdf},
  address = {Manchester, UK},
  pages = {369--388},
  pagecount = {20},
  year = {2000},
  pind = {EZ~13~12~04},
  isbn = {1 902426 07 X},
  export = {yes},
  abstract = {In this paper we present SoFAR, a versatile multi-agent framework
              designed for Distributed Information Management tasks.  SoFAR
              embraces the notion of proactivity as the opportunistic reuse of
              the services provided by other agents, and provides the means to
              enable agents to locate suitable service providers.  The
              contribution of SoFAR is to combine some ideas from the
              distributed computing community with the performative-based
              communications used in other agent systems: communications in
              SoFAR are based on the startpoint/endpoint paradigm, which is the
              foundation of Nexus, the communication layer at the heart of the
              Computational Grid. We explain the rationale behind our design
              decisions, and describe the predefined set of agents which make
              up the core of the system. Two distributed information management
              applications have been written, a general query architecture and
              an open hypermedia application, and we recount their design and
              operations.}
}
@inproceedings{Moore-Moreau:OHS6,
  author = {Graham Moore and Luc Moreau},
  title = {{From Metadata to Links}},
  booktitle = {The Sixth Workshop on Open Hypermedia Systems (OHS 6)},
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/md.pdf},
  doi = {10.1007/3-540-39941-0_10},
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254475/},
  export = {yes},
  year = 2000,
  pages = {77--86},
  pagecount = {10},
  volume = 1903,
  pind = {EZ~2~2~04},
  series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
  address = {San-Antonio, Texas},
  month = may,
  publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
  abstract = {Metadata systems are considered to be a powerful and generalised
              mechanism for extending the properties that constitute an object
              and for facilitating access to information. However, there is
              another mechanism, linking, that can also be considered as having
              the ability to extend the properties of an object and provide
              systems and users with more useful means of accessing
              information. In this paper, we represent both metadata and
              linking as abstract models and show how the metadata model may be
              expressed in terms of the linking mechanism. Then we discuss the
              benefits of the more general model of linking.}
}
@inproceedings{Millard-Davis-Moreau:OHS6,
  author = {Dave Millard and Hugh Davis and Luc Moreau},
  title = {{Standardizing Hypertext: Where Next for OHP?}},
  booktitle = {The Sixth Workshop on Open Hypermedia Systems (OHS 6)},
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/ohs6.pdf},
  doi = {10.1007/3-540-39941-0_2},
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254476/},
  export = {yes},
  year = 2000,
  pages = {3--12},
  pagecount = {10},
  volume = 1903,
  series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
  pind = {EZ~3~3~04},
  address = {San-Antonio, Texas},
  month = may,
  publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
  abstract = {Over the last six years the Open Hypermedia Systems Working Group
            (OHSWG) has be en working in a coordinated effort to produce a
            protocol which will allow compon ents of an Open Hypermedia System
            to talk to one another in a standardised manne r. In this paper we
            reflect on this work and the knowledge that has come out of it,
            evaluating the differant approaches to standardisation in the light
            of our e xperiences. We discuss the problems we encountered and
            redefine the goals of the effort to be more realistic, presenting
            the Fundamental Open Hypermedia Model (FOHM) as an example of this
            more realistic approach. Finally we describe a possi ble future
            path that encompasses the research interests of the OHSWG while
            still leading ultimately to interoperability.}
}
@techreport{moreau:dera00,
  author = {David {DeRoure (Coordinator)} and Luc {Moreau (Editor)} and Michael
                  Butler and Tim Chown and Pieter Hartel},
  title = {Study of Security in Multi-Agent Architectures},
  institution = {DERA},
  year = 2000,
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/sec.pdf},
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254477/},
  export = {yes},
  number = {Contract CU016-0000000902}
}
@inproceedings{Rana-Moreau:UKMAS00,
  author = {Omer F. Rana and Luc Moreau},
  title = {{Issues in Building Agent based Computational Grids}},
  booktitle = {Third Workshop of the UK Special Interest Group on
                  Multi-Agent Systems (UKMAS'2000)},
  year = 2000,
  address = {Oxford, UK},
  month = dec,
  pages = {11},
  pagecount = {11},
  export = {yes},
  local = {https://nms.kcl.ac.uk/luc.moreau/papers/ukmas.pdf},
  eprints = {https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/254481/},
  abstract = {We emphasise and briefly review existing infrastructure required to realise
the Computational Grid, and define such Grid with reference to Knowledge and
Information Grids.  We then propose an agent-based approach for the Computational
Grid, which is centered on providing ``services'' for managing resources.}
}