Congregating Agents
Principal Investigators: William P. Birmingham and Edmund H. Durfee
Student Invesigators: Peter Weinstein, Aaron
Armstrong, and Chris Brooks
Supported by the National Science
Foundation, Grant IRI-9872057
Project Abstract:
In agent-based systems, agents can team in
different combinations to cooperatively solve problems. Teaming, however,
requires that agents understand each other and commit to concerted actions. In
open, evolving networked systems, universal understanding and commitment are
unlikely; instead, agents should congregate with those agents that they can
understand and with whom they have successfully teamed in the past. Agent
congregations are defined by commitments to common semantics and ontologies
(conceptualizations of the world). Congregating improves the efficiency of
communication and the likelihood of successful teaming. It can, however, impede
the formation of effective teams whose members cross congregations, because
agents need to learn new ontologies and incur overhead in searching for new
congregations that meet their preferences.
This project investigates how agent
congregations are formed and how and when they should be reformed. The research
includes simulations of large communities of agents, formal models of agency,
and prototype systems. Its results will help guide the development of a
national computing and communication infrastructure that supports the evolving
identities and interests of scientific, educational, and commercial
communities, and encourages communication between different communities.
For more information, see:
http://musen.engin.umich.edu/agents/