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Effective acceptance conditions in real-time automated negotiation

Effective acceptance conditions in real-time automated negotiation
Effective acceptance conditions in real-time automated negotiation
In every negotiation with a deadline, one of the negotiating parties must accept an offer to avoid a break off. As a break off is usually an undesirable outcome for both parties, it is important that a negotiator employs a proficient mechanism to decide under which conditions to accept. When designing such conditions, one is faced with the acceptance dilemma: accepting the current offer may be suboptimal, as better offers may still be presented before time runs out. On the other hand, accepting too late may prevent an agreement from being reached, resulting in a break off with no gain for either party. Motivated by the challenges of bilateral negotiations between automated agents and by the results and insights of the automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC), we classify and compare state-of-the-art generic acceptance conditions. We perform extensive experiments to compare the performance of various acceptance conditions in combination with a broad range of bidding strategies and negotiation scenarios. Furthermore we propose new acceptance conditions and we demonstrate that they outperform the other conditions. We also provide insight into why some conditions work better than others and investigate correlations between the properties of the negotiation scenario and the efficacy of acceptance conditions
acceptance conditions, acceptance criteria, automated negotiation, real-time bilateral negotiation, when to accept
0167-9236
68-77
Baarslag, Tim
a7c541d8-8141-467b-a08c-7a81cd69920e
Hindriks, Koen
37537aff-8c5e-420e-b424-1cb0c26aa7d7
Jonker, Catholijn
492a7c03-c206-4fad-9a9c-a156a96c4245
Baarslag, Tim
a7c541d8-8141-467b-a08c-7a81cd69920e
Hindriks, Koen
37537aff-8c5e-420e-b424-1cb0c26aa7d7
Jonker, Catholijn
492a7c03-c206-4fad-9a9c-a156a96c4245

Baarslag, Tim, Hindriks, Koen and Jonker, Catholijn (2014) Effective acceptance conditions in real-time automated negotiation. Decision Support Systems, 60, 68-77. (doi:10.1016/j.dss.2013.05.021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In every negotiation with a deadline, one of the negotiating parties must accept an offer to avoid a break off. As a break off is usually an undesirable outcome for both parties, it is important that a negotiator employs a proficient mechanism to decide under which conditions to accept. When designing such conditions, one is faced with the acceptance dilemma: accepting the current offer may be suboptimal, as better offers may still be presented before time runs out. On the other hand, accepting too late may prevent an agreement from being reached, resulting in a break off with no gain for either party. Motivated by the challenges of bilateral negotiations between automated agents and by the results and insights of the automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC), we classify and compare state-of-the-art generic acceptance conditions. We perform extensive experiments to compare the performance of various acceptance conditions in combination with a broad range of bidding strategies and negotiation scenarios. Furthermore we propose new acceptance conditions and we demonstrate that they outperform the other conditions. We also provide insight into why some conditions work better than others and investigate correlations between the properties of the negotiation scenario and the efficacy of acceptance conditions

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Published date: April 2014
Keywords: acceptance conditions, acceptance criteria, automated negotiation, real-time bilateral negotiation, when to accept
Organisations: Agents, Interactions & Complexity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 373622
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373622
ISSN: 0167-9236
PURE UUID: ccbc5230-b3db-4a36-ad4a-7e7f63a50fb1
ORCID for Tim Baarslag: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1662-3910

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Jan 2015 09:27
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:55

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Contributors

Author: Tim Baarslag ORCID iD
Author: Koen Hindriks
Author: Catholijn Jonker

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