Vidal's libraryTitle: | Automated Negotiation: Prospects Methods and Challenges |
Author: | Nicholas R. Jennings, Peyman Faratin, A. R. Lomuscio, Simon Parsons, Michael Wooldridge, and Carles Sierra |
Journal: | Group Decision and Negotiation |
Volume: | 10 |
Number: | 2 |
Pages: | 199--215 |
Year: | 2001 |
Abstract: | The remainder of this paper is structured as follows. Section 2 presents a generic framework for automated negotiation. This framework is then used to structure the subsequent discussion and analysis of the various negotiation techniques; section 3 deals with game theoretic techniques, section 4 with heuristic techniques, and section 5 with argumentation-based techniques. Finally, section 6 outlines some of the major challenges that need to be addressed before automated negotiation becomes pervasive. |
Cited by 285 - Google Scholar
@Article{jennings01a,
author = {Nicholas R. Jennings and Peyman Faratin and
A. R. Lomuscio and Simon Parsons and Michael
Wooldridge and Carles Sierra},
title = {Automated Negotiation: Prospects Methods and
Challenges},
googleid = {CJx0BWmp1o8J:scholar.google.com/},
journal = {Group Decision and Negotiation},
year = 2001,
volume = 10,
number = 2,
pages = {199--215},
abstract = {The remainder of this paper is structured as
follows. Section 2 presents a generic framework for
automated negotiation. This framework is then used
to structure the subsequent discussion and analysis
of the various negotiation techniques; section 3
deals with game theoretic techniques, section 4 with
heuristic techniques, and section 5 with
argumentation-based techniques. Finally, section 6
outlines some of the major challenges that need to
be addressed before automated negotiation becomes
pervasive.},
keywords = {multiagent negotiation survey},
url = {http://jmvidal.cse.sc.edu/library/jennings01a.pdf},
cluster = {10364657860967963656}
}
Last modified: Wed Mar 9 10:15:09 EST 2011