CMU-ISRI-06-104
Institute for Software Research
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University



CMU-ISRI-06-104

CMieux 2005:
Design and Analysis of Carnegie Mellon University's Entry
in the Supply Chain Trading Agent Competition

Michael Benisch, Alberto Sardinha, James Andrews, Norman Sadeh

April 2006

CMU-ISRI-06-104.pdf


Keywords: Multi-Agent Systems, Supply Chain Management, Trading Agent Design


Supply chains are a central part of today's global economy. Existing management practices consist primarily of static interactions between established partners. Global competition, shorter product life cycles and the emergence of Internet-mediated business solutions create an incentive for exploring more dynamic supply chain practices. The Supply Chain Trading Agent Competition (TAC SCM) was designed to explore approaches to dynamic supply chain trading. TAC SCM pits against one another trading agents developed by teams from around the world. Each agent is responsible for running the procurement, planning and bidding operations of a PC assembly company, while competing with others for both customer orders and supplies under varying market conditions. This paper presents Carnegie Mellon University's 2005 TAC SCM entry, the CMieux supply chain trading agent. CMieux implements a novel approach to coordinating supply chain bidding, procurement and planning, with an emphasis on the ability to rapidly adapt to changing market conditions. We present empirical results based on 200 games involving agents entered by 25 different teams during what can be seen as the most competitive phase of the 2005 tournament. Not only did CMieux perform among the top five agents, it significantly outperformed these agents in procurement while matching their bidding performance.

30 pages


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