Business Rules for Electronic Commerce:  Project at IBM T.J. Watson Research


Business Rules for Electronic Commerce: Project at IBM T.J. Watson Research

 

Quick links:

 

Project overview of Business Rules for E-Commerce (BREC):

Started in 1997, this project grew out of the earlier Intelligent Agents project (1994-97) at IBM T.J. Watson Research Center.

In the BREC project, we are investigating rule-based business processes for e-commerce: both business-to-business (B2B), e.g., to integrate supply chains; and business-to-consumer (B2C).

Overall, our mission is to develop technology that is highly reusable and easy to integrate with a broad spectrum of networked applications. Towards this end, we prototype applications in tandem with developing reusable componentry. We also contribute to company-wide efforts in strategy and in common architecture, e.g., for inter-agent knowledge-level communication and inter-operability. Our reusable technology for business rules and rule-based intelligent agents is embodied as an extensible structured Java library, called CommonRules (formerly called DIPLOMAT; follow-on to RAISE and Agent Building Environment implemented in C++).

An alpha prototype of CommonRules has been released (free with trial license) on the Web, at AlphaWorks. You can see the overview of the CommonRules 1.0 release of July 30, 1999.

Specifically, we have been developing:

We have further been developing:

As part of all this, our group leads a

The BREC project overall builds upon the work in our earlier Intelligent Agents project (1994-97), including the techniques developed there in the RAISE IBM-Research prototype (in C++), and in the IBM-Development-version alpha Agent Building Environment (ABE) whose heart was RAISE. In particular, the "situated" technique in CommonRules is an enhanced version of the "situated" technique in RAISE and ABE. ABE was in release 1996-98. RAISE/ABE was used for several pilot rule-based intelligent agent applications including mail, news, customer service, and manufacturing workflow & control.

The Information Economies Project also grew out of the earlier Intelligent Agents project. It investigates economies composed of intelligent agents that buy and sell to each other, including brokering, learning, pricing, game-theory, and large-scale market phenomena. It thus explores issues that will in future be important for practical e-commerce agents, including those built using the techniques in the BREC project.

 

More project overview in the form of talk slides:

A more detailed project overview is available as project-overview talk slides in HTML. You can also get this set of slides instead in pdf format (good for printing, but unfortunately appears on screen only in sideways-rotated orientation, at least in Acrobat Reader 3.0) or in postscript format (in postscript viewer, set Orientation to be Landscape; this file may be somewhat device-dependent for printing).

 

Papers etc. from the project:

We have a number of papers and other documents, including talk slides and patents, available about the techniques and applications.

 

Related projects:

Two other projects besides BREC grew out of our former Intelligent Agents project:

 

Interesting e-commerce links:

Events:

 

For further information, please contact: Benjamin Grosof at grosof@us.ibm.com


Last update: 8-09-99
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