OpenAIR
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
OpenAIR is a message routing and communication protocol for A.I. systems that has been gaining in popularity in recent years. The protocol is managed by Mindmakers.org, and is described on their site in the following manner:
"OpenAIR is a routing and communication protocol based on a publish-subscribe architecture. It is intended to be the "glue" that allows numerous A.I. researchers to share code more effectively — "AIR to share". It is a definition or a blueprint of the "post office and mail delivery system" for distributed, multi-module systems. OpenAIR provides a core foundation upon which subsequent markup languages and semantics can be based, for e.g. gesture recognition and generation, computer vision, hardware-software interfacing etc; for a recent example see CVML."[1]
OpenAIR was created to allow software components that serve their own purpose to communicate with eachother in order to produce large scale, overall behavior of an intelligent systems. A simple example would be to have a speech recognition system, and a speech synthesizer communicate with an expert system through OpenAIR messages, to create a system that can hear and answer various questions through spoken dialogue.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Mindmakers.org, the managers of the OpenAIR protocol.