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Sep 2001
ISBN 0262112647
280 pp.
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Strategic Negotiation in Multiagent Environments
Sarit Kraus

As computers advance from isolated workstations to linked elements in complex communities of systems and people, cooperation and coordination via intelligent agents become increasingly important. Examples of such communities include the Internet, electronic commerce, health institutions, electricity networks, and digital libraries.

Sarit Kraus is concerned here with the cooperation and coordination of intelligent agents that are self-interested and usually owned by different individuals or organizations. Conflicts frequently arise, and negotiation is one of the main mechanisms for reaching agreement. Kraus presents a strategic-negotiation model that enables autonomous agents to reach mutually beneficial agreements efficiently in complex environments. The model, which integrates game theory, economic techniques, and heuristic methods of artificial intelligence, can be automated in computer systems or applied to human situations. The book provides both theoretical and experimental results.

Table of Contents
 Preface
 Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 The Strategic-Negotiation Model
3 Negotiations about Data Allocation
4 Negotiations about Resource Allocation
5 Negotiations about Resource Allocation with Multiple Attributes
6 Negotiations about Task Distribution
7 Negotiations about How to Reduce Pollution
8 Negotiation during a Hostage Crisis
9 Economic and Game-Theoretic Models for Cooperation
10 Conclusions and Future Directions
A Suggested Background Reading
B Glossary of Notations
 Notes
 References
 Index
 
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Related Topics
Computational Intelligence
Psychology, Cognitive Science


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