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Issue title: Advances in Agent-mediated Automated Negotiations
Guest editors: Minjie Zhangx and Takayuki Itoy
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Luo, Yi; * | Bölöni, Ladislau
Affiliations: School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA | [x] University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia | [y] Nagoya Institute of Technology, Gokiso, Showa, Nagoya 466-8555, Japan
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author. E-mail: yiluo@mail.ucf.edu
Abstract: In the convoy formation problem, two embodied agents are negotiating the synchronization of their movement for a portion of the path from their respective sources to destinations. As equilibrium strategies are not practically possible, we are interested in strategies with bounded rationality, which achieve good performance in a wide range of practical negotiation scenarios. Naturally, the performance of a strategy is dependent on the strategy of the opponent and the characteristics of the scenario. The goal of this paper is to develop a collaborativeness metric of the negotiation scenario which formalizes our intuition of collaborative scenarios (where the agents' interests are closely aligned) versus competitive scenarios (where the gain of the utility for one agent is paid off with a loss of utility for the other agent). We are using the Children in the Rectangular Forest (CRF) game as a canonical model of convoy formation, assume zero initial knowledge and a negotiation protocol requiring mandatory, but non-binding evaluations of the opponents offer. We also assume that the negotiation happens in physical time. We describe two negotiation strategies: the comparatively simple Internal Negotiation Deadline (IND) strategy and the computationally more expensive Uniform Concession (UC) strategy. Then, we describe how these strategies can be augmented by collaborativeness analysis: we approximate the collaborativeness metric in the first several negotiation rounds, and use the result to cut short the negotiation when the estimated collaborativeness is lower than a threshold. Through an experimental study, we show that augmenting the strategies with collaborativeness analysis significantly improves their performance for low collaborativeness scenarios, with only a minimal penalty in high collaborativeness scenarios.
DOI: 10.3233/MGS-2010-0159
Journal: Multiagent and Grid Systems , vol. 6, no. 5-6, pp. 415-435, 2010
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