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   KEYWORDS : SOFTWARE AGENTS
News Resources Bibliography
Silicon super-agents -- Barbara Gengler  -- Australian IT  -- April 30, 2002

Autonomous software agents are rapidly moving from the development stage to providing industrial-strength help in everyday environments. Gartner forecasts that enterprise automation, which includes autonomous software agents and artificial intelligence software, will account for almost 50 per cent of total IT spending in 10 years.

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The Smartest Agents Will Learn to Be Team Players -- Christopher Locke  -- Red Herring  -- January 09, 2002

As their tasks become more complex, the smartest software agents will learn to be team players, cooperating with other agents to find optimal solutions.

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Software agents evolve purpose -- Kimberly Patch  -- Technology and Research News  -- January 02, 2002

Researchers from the Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics in Russia have shown that purposeful behavior, or motivation can emerge naturally in a software simulation that has simple software beings, or agents, evolving over many generations.

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The Sims Take on Al Qaeda -- Karen Kaplan  -- Los Angeles Times  -- November 02, 2001

In the new war against terrorism, with its infinite possibilities for unpredictable violence, the military is attempting to understand jihad through the infinitely patient and dogged computer. The new breed of virtual war game is attempting to push into that unexplored terrain, drawing from a burgeoning field of artificial intelligence known as "agent technology."

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A.I.: Latest foot soldier in the war on terror -- Staff  -- USA Today  -- October 02, 2001

The military is testing software robots that can identify targets and present them to commanders much more quickly than a human could. The software, known as the Control of Agent-Based Systems or CoABS, uses artificially intelligent "agents" to sift through troves of images and intelligence data to find viable targets.

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Military Tests Software Agents For Quick Intelligence -- Jim Krane  -- Washington Times  -- October 01, 2001

The military is testing software robots that can identify targets and present them to commanders much more quickly than a human could. The software, known as the Control of Agent-Based Systems or CoABS, uses artificially intelligent "agents" to sift through troves of images and intelligence data to find viable targets.

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Software agents can guide officials in complex crises -- Byron Spice  -- Post Gazette  -- September 30, 2001

Researchers are developing software agents to help decision makers sort through changing and sometimes conflicting information.

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Robots beat human commodity traders -- Duncan Graham-Rowe  -- New Scientist  -- August 09, 2001

Jeffrey Kephart at IBM's research centre has discovered that software agents can make more cash than people when they trade commodities.

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Robots beat humans in trading battle -- Staff  -- BBC News  -- August 08, 2001

In the first ever test of its kind, a team of robots has beaten humans in simulated financial trading. Computer giant IBM pitted robotic trading agents, known as "bots", against humans in trading commodities such as pork bellies and gold.

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PICeS: Cooperating Intelligent Agents for Preventing Invasions of Computer Networks Vital to Our National Security -- Jeffrey L. Goldberg  -- Homeland Defense Journal  -- July 01, 2001

The author argues for the deployment of intelligent agent technologies to crawl the web and perform the threat detection, intrusion detection, and intrusion prevention functions necessary to "addresses a gap in current computer security technology and a growing deficiency in the fabric of our national security and homeland defense."

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