Title: | Evaluating Risk: Flexibility and Feasibility in MultiAgent Contracting |
Author: | Bamshad Mobasher, John Collins, Maksim Tsvetovat, Rashmi Sundareswara, Joshua van Tonder, Maria Gini |
Abstract: | In an automated contracting environment, where a ``customer''
agent must negotiate with other selfinterested ``supplier'' agents in order to execute its plans, there is a tradeoff between giving the suppliers
sufficient flexibility to incorporate the requirements of the customer's callforbids into their own resource schedules, and ensuring the customer that any bids received can be composed into a feasible plan.
In this paper, we introduce a bid evaluation process that incorporates cost, task coverage, temporal feasibility, and risk estimation. Using
this evaluation process, we provide an empirical study of the trade-offs between flexibility, plan feasibility, and cost in the context of our MAGNET multiagent contracting market infrastructure. Our experimental results demonstrate that the advantage of increasing supplier flexibility is dependent on the number of available suppliers. In other words, if the number of suppliers is small, the risk of plan infeasibility outweighs the advantage of added flexibility. On the other hand, if the number of suppliers is large, the more flexible plan specifications result in lowerrisk plans. |
Full Paper: | [postscript ] |