STAIR: Stability criterion for Time-windowed Assignment and Internal adversarial influence in Routing and decision-making
Roee M. Francos, Daniel Garces, Orhan Eren Akg\"un, Stephanie Gil

TL;DR
This paper introduces STAIR, a new stability criterion for routing in multi-agent systems under adversarial attacks, linking stability to operational metrics and demonstrating its effectiveness through real-world simulations.
Contribution
The paper proposes STAIR, a novel stability criterion that is easier to analyze in adversarial routing scenarios and does not rely on discount factors, unlike traditional methods.
Findings
STAIR effectively monitors adversarial impact on routing systems
Time-window constraints mitigate degenerate stability phenomena
Simulations on real-world data validate the approach
Abstract
A major limitation of existing routing algorithms for multi-agent systems is that they are designed without considering the potential presence of adversarial agents in the decision-making loop, which could lead to severe performance degradation in real-life applications where adversarial agents may be present. We study autonomous pickup-and-delivery routing problems in which adversarial agents launch coordinated denial-of-service attacks by spoofing their locations. This deception causes the central scheduler to assign pickup requests to adversarial agents instead of cooperative agents. Adversarial agents then choose not to service the requests with the goal of disrupting the operation of the system, leading to delays, cancellations, and potential instability in the routing policy. Policy stability in routing problems is typically defined as the cost of the policy being uniformly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNetwork Traffic and Congestion Control · Optimization and Search Problems · Game Theory and Applications
