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An Introduction to Congregating in Multiagent Systems
Boston, Massachusetts July 10-July 12
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICMAS.2000.858434Fourth International Conference on Mu ...
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Christopher H. Brooks, University of Michigan
Edmund H. Durfee, University of Michigan
Aaron Armstrong, University of Michigan
We present congregating both as a metaphor for describing and modeling multiagent systems (MAS) and as a means for reducing coordination costs. We show how congregations can be used to explain and predict the behavior of self-interested agents that are searching for other agents to interact with. This framework is integrated with Vidal and Durfee's CLRI framework [11] for evaluating learning within MAS. We provide experimental and analytical results, which describe how the difficulty of the congregating problem increases exponentially with the number of agents, and present a solution to this in the form of labelers, which are agents that assign a description to a congregation, thereby reducing agents' search problem.
Citation:
Christopher H. Brooks, Edmund H. Durfee, Aaron Armstrong, "An Introduction to Congregating in Multiagent Systems," icmas, pp.0079, Fourth International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems (ICMAS'00), 2000
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