Proceedings:
First International Conference on Multiagent Systems
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First International Conference on Multiagent Systems
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Abstract:
Distributed constraint optimization imposes considerable complexity in agents’ coordinated search for an optimal solution. However, in many application domains, problems often exhibit special structures that can be exploited to facilitate more efficient problem solving. One of the most recurrent structures involves disparity among subpmblems. We present a coordination mechanism, AnchorandAscend, for distributed constraint optimization that takes advantage of disparity among subpmblems to efficiently guide distributed local search for global optimality. The coordination mechanism assigns different overlapping subpmblems to agents who must interact and iteratively converge on a solution. In particular, an anchor agent who conducts local best first search to optimize its subsolution interacts with the rest of the agents who perform distributed constraint satisfaction to enforce problem constraints and constraints imposed by the anchor agent. We focus our study on the well-known NP-complete job shop scheduling problem. We define and study two problem structure measures, disparity ratio and disparity composition ratio. We experimentally evaluated the effectiveness of the AnchorandAscend mechanism on a suite of job shop scheduling problems over a wide range of values of disparity composition. Our experimental results show that (1) considerable advantage can be obtained by explicitly exploiting disparity (2) disparity composition ratio plays a more important role than disparity ratio in finding high quality solution with little computational cost.
ICMAS
First International Conference on Multiagent Systems