2 research outputs found

    A demand-driven approach for a multi-agent system in Supply Chain Management

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    This paper presents the architecture of a multi-agent decision support system for Supply Chain Management (SCM) which has been designed to compete in the TAC SCM game. The behaviour of the system is demand-driven and the agents plan, predict, and react dynamically to changes in the market. The main strength of the system lies in the ability of the Demand agent to predict customer winning bid prices - the highest prices the agent can offer customers and still obtain their orders. This paper investigates the effect of the ability to predict customer order prices on the overall performance of the system. Four strategies are proposed and compared for predicting such prices. The experimental results reveal which strategies are better and show that there is a correlation between the accuracy of the models' predictions and the overall system performance: the more accurate the prediction of customer order prices, the higher the profit. © 2010 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg

    Toward Automating and Systematizing the Use of Domain Knowledge in Feature Selection

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    University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2015. Major: Computer Science. Advisor: Maria Gini. 1 computer file (PDF); xi, 185 pages.Constructing prediction models for real-world domains often involves practical complexities that must be addressed to achieve good prediction results. Often, there are too many sources of data (features). Limiting the set of features in the prediction model is essential for good performance, but prediction accuracy may be degraded by the inadvertent removal of relevant features. The problem is even more acute in situations where the number of training instances is limited, as limited sample size and domain complexity are often attributes of real-world problems. This thesis explores the practical challenges of building regression models in large multivariate time-series domains with known relationships between variables. Further, we explore the conventional wisdom related to preparing datasets for model calibration in machine learning, and discuss best practices for learning time-varying concepts from data. The core contribution of this work is a novel wrapper-based feature selection framework called Developer-Guided Feature Selection (DGFS). It systematically incorporates domain knowledge for domains characterized by a large number of observable features. The observable features may be related to each other by logical, temporal, or spatial relationships, some of which are known to the model developer a priori. The approach relies on limited domain-specific knowledge but can replace or improve upon more elaborate domain specific models and on fully automated feature selection for many applications. As a wrapper-based approach, DGFS can augment existing multivariate techniques used in high-dimensional domains to produce improved modeling results particularly in situations where the volume of training data is limited. We demonstrate the viability of our method in several complex domains (natural and synthetic) that have significant temporal aspects and many observable features
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