Title :
Cooperative multiagent systems for the optimization of urban traffic
Author :
Bitting, Elijah ; Ghorbani, Ali A.
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Comput. Sci., New Brunswick Univ., Fredericton, NB, Canada
Abstract :
The risks and benefits of trusting others in a cooperative context is discussed and the notion of social rationality is used to establish these ideas in the realm of autonomous rational agents (utility maximizers). A traffic simulation is introduced to test the ideas presented in this work. The simulation consists of traffic lights controlled by cooperative autonomous agents, each of whom is given mechanisms to implement social rationality. Results using cooperative traffic agents are compared to results of control simulations where non-cooperative agents were deployed. Results predictably show a loss of local efficiency and a gain of global efficiency with the cooperative agents in comparison to their non-cooperative counterparts.
Keywords :
multi-agent systems; road traffic; traffic engineering computing; autonomous rational agents; control simulation; cooperative autonomous agent; cooperative context; cooperative multiagent systems; cooperative traffic agents; noncooperative agent; traffic light control; traffic simulation; urban traffic optimization; Autonomous agents; Collaboration; Collaborative work; Computational modeling; Computer science; Lighting control; Multiagent systems; Niobium; Testing; Traffic control;
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Agent Technology, 2004. (IAT 2004). Proceedings. IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2101-0
DOI :
10.1109/IAT.2004.1342941