A Baseline for Nonlinear Bilateral Negotiations: The full results of the agents competing in ANAC 2014

Reyhan Aydoğan, Catholijn M. Jonker, Katsuhide Fujita, Tim Baarslag, Takayuki Ito, Rafik Hadfi, Kohei Hayakawa

Research output: Chapter in Book/Conference proceedings/Edited volumeChapterScientificpeer-review

Abstract

In the past few years, there is a growing interest in automated negotiationin which software agents facilitate negotiation on behalf of their users and try to reach joint agreements. The potential value of developing such mechanisms becomes enormous when negotiation domain is too complex for humans to find agreements (e.g. e-commerce) and when software components need to reach agreements to work together (e.g. web-service composition). Here, one of the major challenges is to design agents that are able to deal with incomplete information about their opponents in negotiation as well as to effectively negotiate on their users’ behalves. To facilitate the research in this field, an automated negotiating agent competition has been organized yearly. This paper introduces the research challenges in Automated Negotiating Agent Competition (ANAC) 2014 and explains the competition set up and results. Furthermore, a detailed analysis of the best performing five agent has been examined.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCurrent and Future Developments in Artificial Intelligence
EditorsFaira Nassiri-Mofakham
PublisherBentham Science
Pages93-121
Number of pages29
ISBN (Electronic)978-1-68108-502-9, 2017
ISBN (Print)978-1-68108-503-6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • Automated Negotiation
  • Nonlinear Utility Functions
  • Agent Competition

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