Browsing by Author "Ito, T."
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Conference paperPublication Metadata only ANAC 2017: Repeated multilateral negotiation league(Springer, 2021) Aydoğan, Reyhan; Fujita, K.; Baarslag, T.; Jonker, C. M.; Ito, T.; Computer Science; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanThe Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC) is annually organized competition to facilitate the research on automated negotiation. This paper presents the ANAC 2017 Repeated Multilateral Negotiation League. As human negotiators do, agents are supposed to learn from their previous negotiations and improve their negotiation skills over time. Especially, when they negotiate with the same opponent on the same domain, they can adopt their negotiation strategy according to their past experiences. They can adjust their acceptance threshold or bidding strategy accordingly. In ANAC 2017, participants aimed to develop such a negotiating agent. Accordingly, this paper describes the competition settings and results with a brief description of the winner negotiation strategies.Conference paperPublication Metadata only ANAC 2018: Repeated multilateral negotiation league(Springer, 2020) Aydoğan, Reyhan; Fujita, K.; Baarslag, T.; Jonker, C. M.; Ito, T.; Computer Science; Ohsawa, Y.; Yada, K.; Ito, T.; Takama, Y.; Sato-Shimokawara, E.; Abe, A.; Mori, J.; Matsumura, N.; Matsumura, N.; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanThis is an extension from a selected paper from JSAI2019. There are a number of research challenges in the field of Automated Negotiation. The Ninth International Automated Negotiating Agent Competition encourages participants to develop effective negotiating agents, which can negotiate with multiple opponents more than once. This paper discusses research challenges for such negotiations as well as presenting the competition set-up and results. The results show that winner agents mostly adopt hybrid bidding strategies that take their opponents’ preferences as well as their strategy into account.Conference paperPublication Metadata only Automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC)(AAAI press, 2017) Jonker, C. M.; Aydoğan, Reyhan; Baarslag, T.; Fujita, K.; Ito, T.; Hindiks, K.; Computer Science; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanThe annual International Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC) is used by the automated negotiation research community to benchmark and evaluate its work and to challenge itself. The benchmark problems and evaluation results and the protocols and strategies developed are available to the wider research community.Conference paperPublication Metadata only The challenge of negotiation in the game of diplomacy(Springer Nature, 2019) de Jonge, D.; Baarslag, T.; Aydoğan, Reyhan; Jonker, C.; Fujita, K.; Ito, T.; Computer Science; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanThe game of Diplomacy has been used as a test case for complex automated negotiations for a long time, but to date very few successful negotiation algorithms have been implemented for this game. We have therefore decided to include a Diplomacy tournament within the annual Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC). In this paper we present the setup and the results of the ANAC 2017 Diplomacy Competition and the ANAC 2018 Diplomacy Challenge. We observe that none of the negotiation algorithms submitted to these two editions have been able to significantly improve the performance over a non-negotiating baseline agent. We analyze these algorithms and discuss why it is so hard to write successful negotiation algorithms for Diplomacy. Finally, we provide experimental evidence that, despite these results, coalition formation and coordination do form essential elements of the game.Book ChapterPublication Metadata only The fifth automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC 2014)(Springer Science+Business Media, 2016) Fujita, K.; Aydoğan, Reyhan; Baarslag, T.; Ito, T.; Jonker, C.; Computer Science; Fukuta, N.; Ito, T.; Zhang, M.; Fujita, K.; Robu, V.; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanIn May 2014, we organized the Fifth International Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC 2014) in conjunction with AAMAS 2014. ANAC is an international competition that challenges researchers to develop a successful automated negotiator for scenarios where there is incomplete information about the opponent. One of the goals of this competition is to help steer the research in the area of bilateral multi-issue negotiations, and to encourage the design of generic negotiating agents that are able to operate in a variety of scenarios. 21 teams from 13 different institutes competed in ANAC 2014. This chapter describes the participating agents and the setup of the tournament, including the different negotiation scenarios that were used in the competition. We report on the results of the qualifying and final round of the tournament.EditorialPublication Metadata only Preface(Springer, 2021) Aydoğan, Reyhan; Ito, T.; Moustafa, A.; Otsuka, T.; Zhang, M.; Computer Science; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanN/AEditorialPublication Metadata only Book ChapterPublication Metadata only The sixth automated negotiating agents competition (ANAC 2015)(Springer Nature, 2017) Fujita, K.; Aydoğan, Reyhan; Baarslag, T.; Hindriks, K.; Ito, T.; Jonker, C.; Computer Science; AYDOĞAN, ReyhanIn May 2015, we organized the Sixth International Automated Negotiating Agents Competition (ANAC 2015) in conjunction with AAMAS 2015. ANAC is an international competition that challenges researchers to develop a successful automated negotiator for scenarios where there is incomplete information about the opponent. One of the goals of this competition is to help steer the research in the area of multi-issue negotiations, and to encourage the design of generic negotiating agents that are able to operate in a variety of scenarios. 24 teams from 9 different institutes competed in ANAC 2015. This chapter describes the participating agents and the setup of the tournament, including the different negotiation scenarios that were used in the competition. We report on the results of the qualifying and final round of the tournament.