DocumentCode
777652
Title
On Self-Interested Agents in Vehicular Networks With Car-to-Car Gossiping
Author
Kraus, Sarit ; Lin, Raz ; Shavitt, Yuval
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Bar-Ilan Univ., Ramat-Gan
Volume
57
Issue
6
fYear
2008
Firstpage
3319
Lastpage
3332
Abstract
As more and more cars are equipped with global positioning system (GPS) and Wi-Fi transmitters, it becomes easier to design systems that will allow cars to autonomously interact with each other, e.g., regarding traffic on the roads. Indeed, car manufacturers are already equipping their cars with such devices. Although, currently, these systems are a proprietary, we envision a natural evolution where agent applications will be developed for vehicular systems, e.g., to improve car routing in dense urban areas. Nonetheless, this new technology and agent applications may lead to the emergence of self-interested car owners, who will care more about their own welfare than the social welfare of their peers. These car owners will try to manipulate their agents such that they transmit false data to their peers. Using a simulation environment, which models a real transportation network in a large city, we demonstrate the benefits that are achieved by self- interested agents if no countermeasures are implemented. We then proceed to describe the mechanisms for minimizing the effect of the malicious agents on other agents in the network.
Keywords
Global Positioning System; mobile communication; multi-agent systems; radio transmitters; wireless LAN; Global Positioning System; Wi-Fi transmitters; car routing; car-to-car gossip networks; self-interested agents; vehicular networks; Agent-based deployed applications; agent-based deployed applications; intelligent agents; peer to peer networks; peer-to-peer networks; transportation networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9545
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TVT.2008.927986
Filename
4555244
Link To Document