Belief–desire–intention software model

The belief–desire–intention software model (BDI) is a software model developed for programming intelligent agents. Superficially characterized by the implementation of an agent's beliefs, desires and intentions, it actually uses these concepts to solve a particular problem in agent programming. In essence, it provides a mechanism for separating the activity of selecting a plan (from a plan library or an external planner application) from the execution of currently active plans. Consequently, BDI agents are able to balance the time spent on deliberating about plans (choosing what to do) and executing those plans (doing it). A third activity, creating the plans in the first place (planning), is not within the scope of the model, and is left to the system designer and programmer.

Overview

In order to achieve this separation, the BDI software model implements the principal aspects of Michael Bratman's theory of human practical reasoning (also referred to as Belief-Desire-Intention, or BDI). That is to say, it implements the notions of belief, desire and (in particular) intention, in a manner inspired by Bratman. For Bratman, belief and desire are both pro-attitudes (mental attitudes concerned with action), but intention is distinguished as a conduct-controlling pro-attitude. He identifies commitment as the distinguishing factor between desire and intention, noting that it leads to (1) temporal persistence in plans and (2) further plans being made on the basis of those to which it is already committed. The BDI software model partially addresses these issues. Temporal persistence, in the sense of explicit reference to time, is not explored. The hierarchical nature of plans is more easily implemented: a plan consists of a number of steps, some of which may invoke other plans. The hierarchical definition of plans itself implies a kind of temporal persistence, since the overarching plan remains in effect while subsidiary plans are being executed.

An important aspect of the BDI software model (in terms of its research relevance) is the existence of logical models through which it is possible to define and reason about BDI agents. Research in this area has led, for example, to the axiomatization of some BDI implementations, as well as to formal logical descriptions such as Anand Rao and Michael Georgeff's BDICTL. The latter combines a multiple-modal logic (with modalities representing beliefs, desires and intentions) with the temporal logic CTL*. More recently, Michael Wooldridge has extended BDICTL to define LORA (the Logic Of Rational Agents), by incorporating an action logic. In principle, LORA allows reasoning not only about individual agents, but also about communication and other interaction in a multi-agent system.

The BDI software model is closely associated with intelligent agents, but does not, of itself, ensure all the characteristics associated with such agents. For example, it allows agents to have private beliefs, but does not force them to be private. It also has nothing to say about agent communication. Ultimately, the BDI software model is an attempt to solve a problem that has more to do with plans and planning (the choice and execution thereof) than it has to do with the programming of intelligent agents.

BDI agents

A BDI agent is a particular type of bounded rational software agent, imbued with particular mental attitudes, viz: Beliefs, Desires and Intentions (BDI).

Architecture

This section defines the idealized architectural components of a BDI system.

  • Beliefs: Beliefs represent the informational state of the agent, in other words its beliefs about the world (including itself and other agents). Beliefs can also include inference rules, allowing forward chaining to lead to new beliefs. Using the term belief rather than knowledge recognizes that what an agent believes may not necessarily be true (and in fact may change in the future).
    • Beliefset: Beliefs are stored in database (sometimes called a belief base or a belief set), although that is an implementation decision.
  • Desires: Desires represent the motivational state of the agent. They represent objectives or situations that the agent would like to accomplish or bring about. Examples of desires might be: find the best price, go to the party or become rich.
    • Goals: A goal is a desire that has been adopted for active pursuit by the agent. Usage of the term goals adds the further restriction that the set of active desires must be consistent. For example, one should not have concurrent goals to go to a party and to stay at home – even though they could both be desirable.
  • Intentions: Intentions represent the deliberative state of the agent – what the agent has chosen to do. Intentions are desires to which the agent has to some extent committed. In implemented systems, this means the agent has begun executing a plan.
    • Plans: Plans are sequences of actions (recipes or knowledge areas) that an agent can perform to achieve one or more of its intentions. Plans may include other plans: my plan to go for a drive may include a plan to find my car keys. This reflects that in Bratman's model, plans are initially only partially conceived, with details being filled in as they progress.
  • Events: These are triggers for reactive activity by the agent. An event may update beliefs, trigger plans or modify goals. Events may be generated externally and received by sensors or integrated systems. Additionally, events may be generated internally to trigger decoupled updates or plans of activity.

BDI was also extended with an obligations component, giving rise to the BOID agent architecture[1] to incorporate obligations, norms and commitments of agents that act within a social environment.

BDI interpreter

This section defines an idealized BDI interpreter that provides the basis of SRI's PRS lineage of BDI systems:[2]

  1. initialize-state
  2. repeat
    1. options: option-generator (event-queue)
    2. selected-options: deliberate(options)
    3. update-intentions(selected-options)
    4. execute()
    5. get-new-external-events()
    6. drop-unsuccessful-attitudes()
    7. drop-impossible-attitudes()
  3. end repeat

Limitations and criticisms

The BDI software model is one example of a reasoning architecture for a single rational agent, and one concern in a broader multi-agent system. This section bounds the scope of concerns for the BDI software model, highlighting known limitations of the architecture.

  • Learning: BDI agents lack any specific mechanisms within the architecture to learn from past behavior and adapt to new situations.[3][4]
  • Three attitudes: Classical decision theorists and planning research questions the necessity of having all three attitudes, distributed AI research questions whether the three attitudes are sufficient.[2]
  • Logics: The multi-modal logics that underlie BDI (that do not have complete axiomatizations and are not efficiently computable) have little relevance in practice.[2][5]
  • Multiple agents: In addition to not explicitly supporting learning, the framework may not be appropriate to learning behavior. Further, the BDI model does not explicitly describe mechanisms for interaction with other agents and integration into a multi-agent system.[6]
  • Explicit goals: Most BDI implementations do not have an explicit representation of goals.[7]
  • Lookahead: The architecture does not have (by design) any lookahead deliberation or forward planning. This may not be desirable because adopted plans may use up limited resources, actions may not be reversible, task execution may take longer than forward planning, and actions may have undesirable side effects if unsuccessful.[8]

BDI agent implementations

'Pure' BDI

Extensions and hybrid systems

See also

Notes

  1. J. Broersen, M. Dastani, J. Hulstijn, Z. Huang, L. van der Torre The BOID architecture: conflicts between beliefs, obligations, intentions and desires Proceedings of the fifth international conference on Autonomous agents Pages 9-16, ACM New York, NY, USA
  2. Rao, M. P. Georgeff. (1995). "BDI-agents: From Theory to Practice" (PDF). Proceedings of the First International Conference on Multiagent Systems (ICMAS'95).
  3. Phung, Toan; Michael Winikoff; Lin Padgham (2005). "Learning Within the BDI Framework: An Empirical Analysis". Knowledge-Based Intelligent Information and Engineering Systems. doi:10.1007/11553939_41.
  4. Guerra-Hernández, Alejandro; Amal El Fallah-Seghrouchni; Henry Soldano (2004). "Learning in BDI Multi-agent Systems". Computational Logic in Multi-Agent Systems. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-30200-1_12.
  5. Rao, M. P. Georgeff. (1995). "Formal models and decision procedures for multi-agent systems". Technical Note, AAII. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.52.7924.
  6. Georgeff, Michael; Barney Pell; Martha E. Pollack; Milind Tambe; Michael Wooldridge (1999). "The Belief-Desire-Intention Model of Agency". Intelligent Agents V: Agents Theories, Architectures, and Languages. doi:10.1007/3-540-49057-4_1.
  7. Pokahr, Alexander; Lars Braubach; Winfried Lamersdorf (2005). "Jadex: A BDI Reasoning Engine". Multi-Agent Programming. doi:10.1007/0-387-26350-0_6.
  8. Sardina, Sebastian; Lavindra de Silva; Lin Padgham (2006). "Hierarchical planning in BDI agent programming languages: a formal approach". Proceedings of the fifth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems.
  9. UM-PRS
  10. "OpenPRS". Archived from the original on 2014-10-21. Retrieved 2014-10-23.
  11. AgentSpeak(RT) Archived 2012-03-26 at the Wayback Machine
  12. Vikhorev, K., Alechina, N. and Logan, B. (2011). "Agent programming with priorities and deadlines" Archived March 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. In Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS 2011). Taipei, Taiwan. May 2011., pp. 397-404.
  13. Agent Real-Time System Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  14. Vikhorev, K., Alechina, N. and Logan, B. (2009). "The ARTS Real-Time Agent Architecture" Archived March 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. In Proceedings of Second Workshop on Languages, Methodologies and Development Tools for Multi-agent Systems (LADS2009). Turin, Italy. September 2009. CEUR Workshop Proceedings Vol-494.
  15. JAM
  16. JADEX
  17. SPARK
  18. 2APL
  19. CogniTAO (Think-As-One)
  20. TAO: A JAUS-based High-Level Control System for Single and Multiple Robots Y. Elmaliach, CogniTeam, (2008) "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-01-07. Retrieved 2008-11-03.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. Living Systems Process Suite
  22. Rimassa, G., Greenwood, D. and Kernland, M. E., (2006). The Living Systems Technology Suite: An Autonomous Middleware for Autonomic Computing Archived May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. International Conference on Autonomic and Autonomous Systems (ICAS).
  23. Fichera, Loris; Marletta, Daniele; Nicosia, Vincenzo; Santoro, Corrado (2011). Obdržálek, David; Gottscheber, Achim (eds.). "Flexible Robot Strategy Design Using Belief-Desire-Intention Model". Research and Education in Robotics - EUROBOT 2010. Communications in Computer and Information Science. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. 156: 57–71. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-27272-1_5. ISBN 978-3-642-27272-1.
  24. Gwendolen Semantics:2017
  25. Model Checking Agent Programming Languages
  26. MCAPL (Zenodo)
  27. Brahms
  28. Galitsky, Boris (2013). "Exhaustive simulation of consecutive mental states of human agents". Knowledge-Based Systems. 43: 1–20. doi:10.1016/j.knosys.2012.11.001.
  29. Galitsky, Boris (2012). "Exhaustive simulation of consecutive mental states of human agents". Knowledge-Based Systems. 43: 1–20. doi:10.1016/j.knosys.2012.11.001.

References

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