Peter Stone's Selected Publications

Classified by TopicClassified by Publication TypeSorted by DateSorted by First Author Last NameClassified by Funding Source


Ad Hoc Autonomous Agent Teams: Collaboration without Pre-Coordination

Ad Hoc Autonomous Agent Teams: Collaboration without Pre-Coordination.
Peter Stone, Gal A. Kaminka, Sarit Kraus, and Jeffrey S. Rosenschein .
In Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Conference on Artificial Intelligence, July 2010.
AAAI 2010

Download

[PDF]119.0kB  [postscript]266.6kB  [slides.pdf]8.1MB  

Abstract

As autonomous agents proliferate in the real world, both in software and robotic settings, they will increasingly need to band together for cooperative activities with previously unfamiliar teammates. In such ad hoc team settings, team strategies cannot be developed a priori. Rather, an agent must be prepared to cooperate with many types of teammates: it must collaborate without pre-coordination. This paper challenges the AI community to develop theory and to implement prototypes of ad hoc team agents. It defines the concept of ad hoc team agents, specifies an evaluation paradigm, and provides examples of possible theoretical and empirical approaches to challenge. The goal is to encourage progress towards this ambitious, newly realistic, and increasingly important research goal.

BibTeX Entry

@InProceedings(AAAI10-adhoc,
        author="Peter Stone and Gal A.\ Kaminka and Sarit Kraus and Jeffrey S.\ Rosenschein ",
        title="Ad Hoc Autonomous Agent Teams:  Collaboration without Pre-Coordination",
        booktitle="Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Conference on Artificial Intelligence",
        month="July",year="2010", 
        abstract="
	          As autonomous agents proliferate in the real world,
	          both in software and robotic settings, they will
	          increasingly need to band together for cooperative
	          activities with previously unfamiliar teammates. In
	          such \emph{ad hoc team} settings, team strategies
	          cannot be developed a priori.  Rather, an agent must
	          be prepared to cooperate with many types of
	          teammates: it must collaborate without
	          pre-coordination.  This paper challenges the AI
	          community to develop theory and to implement
	          prototypes of ad hoc team agents.  It defines the
	          concept of ad hoc team agents, specifies an
	          evaluation paradigm, and provides examples of
	          possible theoretical and empirical approaches to
	          challenge.  The goal is to encourage progress
	          towards this ambitious, newly realistic, and
	          increasingly important research goal.",
        wwwnote={<a href="http://www.aaai.org/Conferences/AAAI/aaai10.php">AAAI 2010</a>}, 
)

Generated by bib2html.pl (written by Patrick Riley ) on Wed Apr 17, 2024 18:42:55