Auction-Based Scheduling
Guy Avni, Kaushik Mallik, Suman Sadhukhan

TL;DR
This paper introduces an auction-based modular framework for multi-objective decision-making, allowing independent policy creation and conflict resolution via bidding, demonstrated on path planning problems with temporal objectives.
Contribution
It proposes a novel auction-based mechanism for combining independent policies in multi-objective decision-making, with decentralized algorithms for synthesis under various assumptions.
Findings
Decentralized assume-admissible synthesis is always possible with out-degree at most two.
The framework enables modular policy design and conflict resolution.
The approach is demonstrated on path planning problems with multiple objectives.
Abstract
Many sequential decision-making tasks require satisfaction of multiple, partially contradictory objectives. Existing approaches are monolithic, namely all objectives are fulfilled using a single policy, which is a function that selects a sequence of actions. We present auction-based scheduling, a modular framework for multi-objective decision-making problems. Each objective is fulfilled using a separate policy, and the policies can be independently created, modified, and replaced. Understandably, different policies with conflicting goals may choose conflicting actions at a given time. In order to resolve conflicts, and compose policies, we employ a novel auction-based mechanism. We allocate a bounded budget to each policy, and at each step, the policies simultaneously bid from their available budgets for the privilege of being scheduled and choosing an action. Policies express their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAuction Theory and Applications · Formal Methods in Verification · Transportation and Mobility Innovations
