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Built of multiple interacting agents From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A multi-agent system (MAS or "self-organized system") is a computerized system composed of multiple interacting intelligent agents.[1] Multi-agent systems can solve problems that are difficult or impossible for an individual agent or a monolithic system to solve.[2] Intelligence may include methodic, functional, procedural approaches, algorithmic search or reinforcement learning.[3] With advancements in Large language model (LLMs), LLM-based multi-agent systems have emerged as a new area of research, enabling more sophisticated interactions and coordination among agents.[4]
Despite considerable overlap, a multi-agent system is not always the same as an agent-based model (ABM). The goal of an ABM is to search for explanatory insight into the collective behavior of agents (which do not necessarily need to be "intelligent") obeying simple rules, typically in natural systems, rather than in solving specific practical or engineering problems. The terminology of ABM tends to be used more often in the science, and MAS in engineering and technology.[5] Applications where multi-agent systems research may deliver an appropriate approach include online trading,[6] disaster response,[7][8] target surveillance[9] and social structure modelling.[10]
Multi-agent systems consist of agents and their environment. Typically multi-agent systems research refers to software agents. However, the agents in a multi-agent system could equally well be robots, humans or human teams. A multi-agent system may contain combined human-agent teams.
Agents can be divided into types spanning simple to complex. Categories include:
Agent environments can be divided into:
Agent environments can also be organized according to properties such as accessibility (whether it is possible to gather complete information about the environment), determinism (whether an action causes a definite effect), dynamics (how many entities influence the environment in the moment), discreteness (whether the number of possible actions in the environment is finite), episodicity (whether agent actions in certain time periods influence other periods),[12] and dimensionality (whether spatial characteristics are important factors of the environment and the agent considers space in its decision making).[13] Agent actions are typically mediated via an appropriate middleware. This middleware offers a first-class design abstraction for multi-agent systems, providing means to govern resource access and agent coordination.[14]
The agents in a multi-agent system have several important characteristics:[15]
Multi-agent systems can manifest self-organisation as well as self-direction and other control paradigms and related complex behaviors even when the individual strategies of all their agents are simple.[citation needed] When agents can share knowledge using any agreed language, within the constraints of the system's communication protocol, the approach may lead to a common improvement. Example languages are Knowledge Query Manipulation Language (KQML) or Agent Communication Language (ACL).
Many MAS are implemented in computer simulations, stepping the system through discrete "time steps". The MAS components communicate typically using a weighted request matrix, e.g.
Speed-VERY_IMPORTANT: min=45 mph,
Path length-MEDIUM_IMPORTANCE: max=60 expectedMax=40,
Max-Weight-UNIMPORTANT
Contract Priority-REGULAR
and a weighted response matrix, e.g.
Speed-min:50 but only if weather sunny, Path length:25 for sunny / 46 for rainy Contract Priority-REGULAR note – ambulance will override this priority and you'll have to wait
A challenge-response-contract scheme is common in MAS systems, where
also considering other components, evolving "contracts" and the restriction sets of the component algorithms.
Another paradigm commonly used with MAS is the "pheromone", where components leave information for other nearby components. These pheromones may evaporate/concentrate with time, that is their values may decrease (or increase).
MAS tend to find the best solution for their problems without intervention. There is high similarity here to physical phenomena, such as energy minimizing, where physical objects tend to reach the lowest energy possible within the physically constrained world. For example: many of the cars entering a metropolis in the morning will be available for leaving that same metropolis in the evening.
The systems also tend to prevent propagation of faults, self-recover and be fault tolerant, mainly due to the redundancy of components.
The study of multi-agent systems is "concerned with the development and analysis of sophisticated AI problem-solving and control architectures for both single-agent and multiple-agent systems."[17] Research topics include:
Frameworks have emerged that implement common standards (such as the FIPA and OMG MASIF standards).[23] These frameworks e.g. JADE, save time and aid in the standardization of MAS development.[24]
Currently though, no standard is actively maintained from FIPA or OMG. Efforts for further development of software agents in industrial context are carried out in IEEE IES technical committee on Industrial Agents.[25]
With advancements in Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, LLM-based multi-agent frameworks have emerged as a new paradigm for developing multi-agent applications, with CAMEL[26][4] by CAMEL-AI.org being the first notable framework in this domain.
MAS have not only been applied in academic research, but also in industry.[27] MAS are applied in the real world to graphical applications such as computer games. Agent systems have been used in films.[28] It is widely advocated for use in networking and mobile technologies, to achieve automatic and dynamic load balancing, high scalability and self-healing networks. They are being used for coordinated defence systems.
Other applications[29] include transportation,[30] logistics,[31] graphics, manufacturing, power system,[32] smartgrids,[33] and the GIS.
Also, Multi-agent Systems Artificial Intelligence (MAAI) are used for simulating societies, the purpose thereof being helpful in the fields of climate, energy, epidemiology, conflict management, child abuse, ....[34] Some organisations working on using multi-agent system models include Center for Modelling Social Systems, Centre for Research in Social Simulation, Centre for Policy Modelling, Society for Modelling and Simulation International.[34]
Vehicular traffic with controlled autonomous vehicles can be modelling as a multi-agent system involving crowd dynamics.[35] Hallerbach et al. discussed the application of agent-based approaches for the development and validation of automated driving systems via a digital twin of the vehicle-under-test and microscopic traffic simulation based on independent agents.[36] Waymo has created a multi-agent simulation environment Carcraft to test algorithms for self-driving cars.[37][38] It simulates traffic interactions between human drivers, pedestrians and automated vehicles. People's behavior is imitated by artificial agents based on data of real human behavior.
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