TY - GEN
T1 - Facilitating the Evaluation of Automated Negotiators using Peer Designed Agents
AU - Lin, R
AU - Kraus, S
AU - Oshrat, Y
AU - Gal, Ya'akov (Kobi)
N1 - Place of conference:USA
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Computer agents are increasingly deployed in settings in
which they make decisions with people, such as electronic
commerce, collaborative interfaces, and cognitive assistants.
However, the scientific evaluation of computational strategies
for human-computer decision-making is a costly process, involving
time, effort and personnel. This paper investigates the
use of Peer Designed Agents (PDA)—computer agents developed
by human subjects—as a tool for facilitating the evaluation
process of automatic negotiators that were developed by
researchers. It compares the performance between automatic
negotiators that interacted with PDAs to automatic negotiators
that interacted with actual people in different domains.
The experiments included more than 300 human subjects and
50 PDAs developed by students. Results showed that the
automatic negotiators outperformed PDAs in the same situations
in which they outperformed people, and that on average,
they exhibited the same measure of generosity towards their
negotiation partners. These patterns occurred for all types of
domains, and for all types of automated negotiators, despite
the fact that there were individual differences between the behavior
of PDAs and people. The study thus provides an empirical
proof that PDAs can alleviate the evaluation process
of automatic negotiators, and facilitate their design.
AB - Computer agents are increasingly deployed in settings in
which they make decisions with people, such as electronic
commerce, collaborative interfaces, and cognitive assistants.
However, the scientific evaluation of computational strategies
for human-computer decision-making is a costly process, involving
time, effort and personnel. This paper investigates the
use of Peer Designed Agents (PDA)—computer agents developed
by human subjects—as a tool for facilitating the evaluation
process of automatic negotiators that were developed by
researchers. It compares the performance between automatic
negotiators that interacted with PDAs to automatic negotiators
that interacted with actual people in different domains.
The experiments included more than 300 human subjects and
50 PDAs developed by students. Results showed that the
automatic negotiators outperformed PDAs in the same situations
in which they outperformed people, and that on average,
they exhibited the same measure of generosity towards their
negotiation partners. These patterns occurred for all types of
domains, and for all types of automated negotiators, despite
the fact that there were individual differences between the behavior
of PDAs and people. The study thus provides an empirical
proof that PDAs can alleviate the evaluation process
of automatic negotiators, and facilitate their design.
UR - https://scholar.google.co.il/scholar?q=Facilitating+the+Evaluation+of+Automated+Negotiators+using+Peer+Designed+Agents&btnG=&hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5
M3 - Conference contribution
BT - AAAI
ER -