Title: Mixed-Initiative Decision Support in Agent-Based Automated Contracting
Authors: John Collins, Corey Bilot, Maria Gini, Bamshad Mobasher
Abstract: Using principles from Expected Utility Theory, we analyze the criteria
that a customer agent in agent-based automated contracting would use in
making decisions during the bidding cycle. We use the University of
Minnesota's MAGNET automated-contracting environment as a framework for
this analysis. Two decisions must be made by a customer agent during
this process: deciding the composition of the Request for Quotes, and
evaluating and awarding bids. We show how principles from Expected
Utility Theory can be applied in a mixed-initiative environment, where
user preferences control the decision-making process, and user
decisions are final. Finally, we show how the market infrastructure can
support agent decision-making by gathering and analyzing statistical
data on activities in the market.
Full Paper:  [pdf]