The Computer Science Colloquium
Thursday, November 6, 4:15pm, room 9204/9205
Piotr Gmytrasiewiczn
(University of Illinois at Chicago)
"Decision-Theoretic Planning in Multi-Agent Settings"
The talk will extend the framework of partially observable Markov
decision processes (POMDPs) to multi-agent settings by incorporating
the notion of agent models into the state space. Agents maintain
beliefs over physical states of the environment and over models of
other agents, and they use Bayesian updates to maintain their beliefs
over time. The solutions map belief states to actions. Models of other
agents may include their belief states and are related to agent types
considered in games of incomplete information. We express the agents'
autonomy by postulating that their models are not directly manipulable
or observable by other agents. We show that important properties of
POMDPs, such as convergence of value iteration, the rate of
convergence, and piece-wise linearity and convexity of the value
functions carry over to our framework. Our approach complements a
more traditional approach to interactive settings which uses Nash
equilibria as a solution paradigm. We seek to avoid some of the
drawbacks of equilibria which may be non-unique and do not capture
off-equilibrium behaviors. We do so at the cost of having to
represent, process and continuously revise models of other agents.
Since the agent's beliefs may be arbitrarily nested, the optimal
solutions to decision making problems are only asymptotically
computable. However, approximate belief updates and approximately
optimal plans are computable.
The Colloquium is supported by generous contributions from
the Bloomberg, Information Builders, Inc., and Netlogic,
Inc.
365 Fifth Ave, New York City 10016 | Room 4319 | Phone: 212.817.8190 | Fax: 212.817.1510 | compsci@gc.cuny.edu


