[agents] Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC 2012) - Call for Participation
Enrico Gerding
eg at ecs.soton.ac.uk
Fri Dec 23 15:52:12 EST 2011
The 3rd International Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC 2012)
In conjunction with AAMAS 2012.
June 4-8, 2012, Valencia, Spain
http://anac2012.ecs.soton.ac.uk
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
After the successes of the previous two years, we would like to invite
you to participate in the third Automated Negotiating Agents Competition
(ANAC). This competition brings together researchers from the
negotiation community and provides a unique benchmark for evaluating
practical negotiation strategies in multi-issue domains. In particular,
the goals include of the competition include: (i) to encourage the
design of practical negotiation agents that can proficiently negotiate
against unknown opponents and in a variety of circumstances, (ii) to
provide a benchmark for objectively evaluating different negotiation
strategies, (iii) to explore different learning and adaptation
strategies and opponent models, and (iv) to collect state-of-the-art
negotiating agents and negotiation scenarios, and making them available
to the wider research community.
ENTRANTS
The aim for the entrants to the competition is to develop an autonomous
negotiation agent as well as submit a negotiation scenario. Performance
of the agents will then be evaluated in a tournament setting, where each
agent is matched with all other submitted agents, and each pair of
agents will negotiate in each submitted negotiation scenario.
Negotiations are repeated several times to obtain statistically
significant results. The winning agent will be the one with the highest
overall score.
A negotiation scenario consists of a specification of the objectives and
issues to be resolved by means of negotiation. This includes the
preferences of both negotiating parties about the possible agreements.
The preferences of a party are modelled using linearly additive,
multi-issue utility functions.
RULES OF ENCOUNTER
Negotiations are bilateral and based on the alternating-offers protocol.
Offers are exchanged in real time with a deadline after 3 minutes. This
means that the number of offers exchanged within a certain time period
varies and depends on the computation required by the agents. If no
agreement is reached by the deadline, both agents receive a utility of
zero. In addition, there will be a discount factor in about half of the
domains, where the value of an agreement decreases over time.
The challenge for an agent is to negotiate without any knowledge of the
opponent's preferences and strategy. Although each agent participates in
many negotiation sessions, against different opponents, and in a wide
variety of negotiation scenarios, agents cannot learn between
negotiations. This means that negotiation agents only have the
opportunity to adapt and learn from the offers they receive within a
single negotiation session.
GENIUS
The negotiation tournament is run using the java-based GENIUS
negotiation platform, which has been developed to facilitate research in
the area of bilateral multi-issue negotiation. It has an open
architecture that allows for easy development and integration of
existing negotiating agents using design patterns. GENIUS can be used to
simulate individual negotiation sessions as well as tournaments between
negotiating agents in various negotiation scenarios. The core
functionality of the system includes: (1)specification of negotiation
domains and preference profiles; (2) simulation of a bilateral
negotiation between agents; and (3) analysis of the negotiation outcomes
and negotiation dynamics. It furthermore allows the specification of
negotiation domains and preference profiles by means of a graphical user
interface.
This year's competition will use version 3.2 of the GENIUS platform. The
platform, together with the agents and scenarios from the previous
competitions are available at:
http://mmi.tudelft.nl/genius
To learn more about the 2012 negotiation tournament see:
http://anac2012.ecs.soton.ac.uk/
QUALIFYING ROUND AND FINALS
There will be an initial qualifying rounds, and the top 8 performing
agents will continue to the finals, which will be held at the AAMAS
conference.
It is expected that teams that make it through to the finals will have a
representative attending the AAMAS 2011 conference. Each team in the
final will have the opportunity to give a brief presentation describing
their agent.
PRIZES
There is a generous total reward of US$1500 which will be divided
between the top performing entrants. More details about the prizes will
be announced on the ANAC 2012 website:
http://anac2012.ecs.soton.ac.uk/
IMPORTANT DATES
* 18 March, 2012. The deadline for submitting agents and domains for the
qualifying round.
* 15 April 2012. Announcement of the 8 finalists.
* June 4-8, 2012. Final competition and presentations at the
International Workshop on Agent-based Complex Automated Negotiations
(ACAN 2012). ACAN 2012 will have a special session for presentations for
ANAC teams.
CONTACT
For any questions, the main contact is:
Colin R. Williams crw104 at ecs.soton.ac.uk
LOCAL ORGANISERS
* Colin R. Williams, University of Southampton
* Valentin Robu, University of Southampton
* Enrico Gerding, University of Southampton
* Nicolas R. Jennings, University of Southampton
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
* Takayuki Ito, Nagoya Institute of Technology
* Catholijn Jonker, Delft University of Technology
* Sarit Kraus, University of Maryland and Bar-Ilan University
* Minjie Zhang, University of Wollongong
* Koen Hindriks, Delft University of Technology
* Raz Lin, Bar-Ilan University
* Tim Baarslag, Delft University of Technology
SPONSORS
Makoto Lab., Inc.
--
Dr. Enrico Gerding
Lecturer
Agents, Interaction and Complexity Group Tel: +44 23 8059 9201
Electronics& Computer Science Fax: +44 23 8059 2865
University of Southampton
Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK
email: eg at ecs.soton.ac.uk
www: http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~eg
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