Cooperation among self-interested agents
In open environments there is no central control over agent behaviors. On the contrary, agents in such systems can be assumed to be primarily driven by self interests. In a number of situations, myopic decision making can lead to both unsatisfactory performance by individual agents and undesirable effects at the overall system level. Our goal is to understand domains and environments where self-interested agents may have incentives to cooperate. More specifically, we want to identify and design environmental characteristics and agent behavioral strategies such that the best self-interested behavior is to cooperate with other agents. In such environments, both individual and system-level performance is optimized when agents cooperate. To identify domains with these desirable characteristics, we have to establish mechanisms that can cooperate effectively and is resistant to exploitation. Under the assumption that agents remain in the system for significant time periods, or that the agent composition changes only slowly, we have been studying a probabilistic reciprocity-based strategy for promoting and sustaining cooperation in agent groups. This strategy improves both individual and group performance in the long run. We have also analyzed the effectiveness of this strategy when agents have incomplete information and can over or underestimate the amount of help received. While these initial studies help us understand some basic properties of reciprocity-based agent behaviors, we need to build the underlying theory and investigate other critical aspects of such strategies before practical multiagent systems can be built and deployed effectively in open environments.
Publications From This Project
Sandip Sen, Anish Biswas, and Sandip Debnath,"Believing others: Pros and Cons," in Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Multiagent Systems, (pages 279--286), 2000.
Anish Biswas, Sandip Sen and Sandip Debnath, "Limiting Deception in Groups of Social Agents," Applied Artificial Intelligence Journal, Volume 14, Number 8, pages 785--797 (Special issue on "Deception, Fraud and Trust in Agent Societies").
Anish Biswas and Sandip Sen, "Influence of perspectives on help-giving behaviors,'' in Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Autonomous Agents (pages 352--353), ACM Press, New York, NY, 1999. (Poster Paper)
Sandip Sen and Anish Biswas, "Effects of misconception on reciprocative agents," in Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Autonomous Agents, pages 430--435, 1998.
A. Biswas and S. Sen, "Reciprocating with Learned Models," in the Working notes of the AAAI-98 Spring Symposium on Satisficing Models, pages 15-18. (Symposium Notes available as AAAI Technical Report SS-98-05).
Sandip Sen, "Reciprocity: a foundational principle for promoting cooperative behavior among self-interested agents", in Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Multiagent Systems, pages 322--329, AAAI Press, Menlo Park, CA, 1996.
Mahendra Sekaran and Sandip Sen, "To help or not to help," in the Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 736-741, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, July 1995.