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CMU-ISRI-05-140
Institute for Software Research International
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
CMU-ISRI-05-140
Examining DCSP Coordination Tradeoffs
Michael Benisch, Norman Sadeh
September 2005
CMU-ISRI-05-140.pdf
Keywords: Distributed Constraint Satisfaction, Multi-Agent Coordination,
Multi-Agent Systems
Distributed Constraint Satisfaction Problems (DCSPs) provide a
model to capture a broad range of cooperative multi-agent
problem solving settings. Researchers have generally proposed two
different sets of approaches for solving DCSPs,
backtracking based approaches, such as Asynchronous
Backtracking (ABT), and mediation based approaches, such as Asynchronous
Partial Overlay (APO). These sets of approaches
differ in the levels of coordination employed during conflict
resolution. While the computational and communication complexity of the
backtracking based approaches is well understood, the tradeoffs in
complexity involved in moving toward mediation based approaches are not.
In this paper we comprehensively reexamine the space of mediation based
approaches for DCSP and fill gaps in existing frameworks with new
strategies. We present different mediation session selection rules,
including a rule that favors smaller mediation sessions, and
different mediation strategies, including a decentralized hybrid
strategy based on ABT. We present empirical results on solvable
3-coloring and random binary DCSP problems, that accurately capture
the computational and communication tradeoffs between ABT and various
mediation based approaches. Our results confirm that under some
circumstances the newly presented strategies dominate previously
proposed techniques.
20 pages
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