Baarslag, T.Elfrink, T.Nassiri Mofakham, F.Koça, T.Kaisers, M.Aydoğan, Reyhan2023-05-152023-05-152021http://hdl.handle.net/10679/8259https://doi.org/10.1145/3486622.3494023This study presents Bargaining Chips: a framework for one-to-many concurrent composite negotiations, where multiple deals can be reached and combined. Our framework is designed to mirror the salient aspects of real-life procurement and trading scenarios, in which a buyer seeks to acquire a number of items from different sellers at the same time. To do so, the buyer needs to successfully perform multiple concurrent bilateral negotiations as well as coordinate the composite outcome resulting from each interdependent negotiation. This paper contributes to the state of the art by: (1) presenting a model and test-bed for addressing such challenges; (2) by proposing a new, asynchronous interaction protocol for coordinating concurrent negotiation threads; and (3) by providing classes of multi-deal coordinators that are able to navigate this new one-to-many multi-deal setting. We show that Bargaining Chips can be used to evaluate general asynchronous negotiation and coordination strategies in a setting that generalizes over a number of existing negotiation approaches.engopenAccesshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Bargaining chips: Coordinating one-to-many concurrent composite negotiationsconferenceObject39039700094305930004910.1145/3486622.3494023Asynchronous offersComposite negotiationsConcurrent negotiationsCoordinationMulti-dealOne-to-many negotiations