AI seminar: Robust agent communities

Thursday, June 28, 2007 1:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Speaker: Sandip Sen (University of Tulsa)

We believe that intelligent information agents will represent their users' interest in electronic marketplaces and other forums to trade, exchange, share, identify, and locate goods and services. Such information worlds will present unforeseen opportunities as well as challenges that can be best addressed by robust, self-sustaining agent communities. An agent community is a stable, adaptive group of self-interested agents that share common resources and must coordinate their efforts to effectively develop, utilize and nurture group resources and organization. More specifically, agents will need mechanisms to benefit from complementary expertise in the group, pool together resources to meet new demands and exploit transient opportunities, negotiate fair settlements, develop norms to facilitate coordination, exchange help and transfer knowledge between peers, secure the community against intruders, and learn to collaborate effectively. In this talk, I will summarize some of our research results on trust-based computing, negotiation, and learning that will enable intelligent agents to develop and sustain robust, adaptive, and successful agent communities.

Bio: Sandip Sen is a professor of Computer Science in the University of Tulsa with primary research interests in multiagent systems, machine learning, and evolutionary computation. He completed his PhD in the area of intelligent, distributed scheduling from the University of Michigan in December, 1993. He has authored approximately 200 papers in workshops, conferences, and journals in several areas of artificial intelligence. In 1997 he received the prestigious CAREER award given to outstanding young faculty by the National Science Foundation. He has served on the program committees of most major national and international conferences in the field of intelligent agents. He has chaired multiple international workshops and symposia on agent learning and reasoning. He has also presented several tutorials on multiagent systems in association with the leading international conferences on autonomous agents and multiagent systems.