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Social laws in alternating time: effectiveness, feasibility, and synthesis
2006
Synthese
Since it was first proposed by Moses, Shoham, and Tennenholtz, the social laws paradigm has proved to be one of the most compelling approaches to the offline coordination of multiagent systems. In this paper, we make four key contributions to the theory and practice of social laws in multiagent systems. First, we show that the Alternating-time Temporal Logic (atl) of Alur, Henzinger, and Kupferman provides an elegant and powerful framework within which to express and understand social laws for
doi:10.1007/s11229-006-9072-6
fatcat:ol27c4e5fndnjkudpjtdve43tm