37,655 research outputs found

    Increasing negotiation performance at the edge of the network

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    Automated negotiation has been used in a variety of distributed settings, such as privacy in the Internet of Things (IoT) devices and power distribution in Smart Grids. The most common protocol under which these agents negotiate is the Alternating Offers Protocol (AOP). Under this protocol, agents cannot express any additional information to each other besides a counter offer. This can lead to unnecessarily long negotiations when, for example, negotiations are impossible, risking to waste bandwidth that is a precious resource at the edge of the network. While alternative protocols exist which alleviate this problem, these solutions are too complex for low power devices, such as IoT sensors operating at the edge of the network. To improve this bottleneck, we introduce an extension to AOP called Alternating Constrained Offers Protocol (ACOP), in which agents can also express constraints to each other. This allows agents to both search the possibility space more efficiently and recognise impossible situations sooner. We empirically show that agents using ACOP can significantly reduce the number of messages a negotiation takes, independently of the strategy agents choose. In particular, we show our method significantly reduces the number of messages when an agreement is not possible. Furthermore, when an agreement is possible it reaches this agreement sooner with no negative effect on the utility.Comment: Accepted for presentation at The 7th International Conference on Agreement Technologies (AT 2020

    Informal Workers and Collective Action: A Global Perspective

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    [Excerpt] Around the world, in countries as far flung as Cambodia and Brazil and in industries as diverse as transportation and hospitality, workers in informal employment, who labor every day with no legal or social protection, are organizing and negotiating for better conditions. Some of them are self-employed; others work for wages in either formal or informal enterprises. Some used to have jobs in the formal sector with a union contract; others have always worked informally. To achieve their goals they are mounting collective action campaigns that draw on the repertoire of past generations of workers, but they often recombine them or innovate to fit their unique contexts. Informal workers, their organizations and their campaigns, represent the leading edge of the most significant change in the global labor movement in more than a century. This book tells the story of nine such campaigns

    Separation of Trade Law Powers

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    What are the legal and substantive contours of U.S. trade agreements? Who decides? These questions have long occupied commentators and thinkers in public media and politics

    Separation of Trade Law Powers

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    What are the legal and substantive contours of U.S. trade agreements? Who decides? These questions have long occupied commentators and thinkers in public media and politics

    Silver hair market in Japan? Good quality of (whose) life with silver-to-black consumption?

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    Japanese Society (Silver Market?): Exceptionalism in Socio-Economic Sense? What You See is Not What it is in Japan! This question was my Japanese colleagues and informants confronting me, and I concur with them as I completing this brief…. Perhaps this synopsis could help to realize the limited understanding of we have on another Asia society (despite frequent travels and information exchange in the mobile-Internet age), par­ticularly the enigma about Japanese society’s traditionalism embedded into its supra-modernization trajectories of socio-economic development since 1868! 日本社会(银发市场?):社会经济的例外主义? 你所见的并不是真实的日本!这是我提出这问题时,我的日本同事跟消息提供者对我的反驳,而我完成这篇概论后也认同他们的理据……也许这篇概论能帮助我们意识到自己对另一个亚洲社会的认知是如此有限(即使我们经常到日本旅游,而且又身处这信息交流发达的年代),特别是自1868年起,深嵌于社会经济发展超现代化进程中的日本传统主义,对我们来说真的有如谜一样

    The ISCIP Analyst, Volume VI, Issue 20

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    This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy
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