15,233 research outputs found
Q-Strategy: A Bidding Strategy for Market-Based Allocation of Grid Services
The application of autonomous agents by the provisioning and usage of computational services is an attractive research field. Various methods and technologies in the area of artificial intelligence, statistics and economics are playing together to achieve i) autonomic service provisioning and usage of Grid services, to invent ii) competitive bidding strategies for widely used market mechanisms and to iii) incentivize consumers and providers to use such market-based systems.
The contributions of the paper are threefold. First, we present a bidding agent framework for implementing artificial bidding agents, supporting consumers and providers in technical and economic preference elicitation as well as automated bid generation by the requesting and provisioning of Grid services. Secondly, we introduce a novel consumer-side bidding strategy, which enables a goal-oriented and strategic behavior by the generation and submission of consumer service requests and selection of provider offers. Thirdly, we evaluate and compare the Q-strategy, implemented within the presented framework, against the Truth-Telling bidding strategy in three mechanisms – a centralized CDA, a decentralized on-line machine scheduling and a FIFO-scheduling mechanisms
Rational bidding using reinforcement learning: an application in automated resource allocation
The application of autonomous agents by the provisioning and usage of computational resources is an attractive research field. Various methods and technologies in the area of artificial intelligence, statistics and economics are playing together to achieve i) autonomic resource provisioning and usage of computational resources, to invent ii) competitive bidding strategies for widely used market mechanisms and to iii) incentivize consumers and providers to use such market-based systems.
The contributions of the paper are threefold. First, we present a framework for supporting consumers and providers in technical and economic preference elicitation and the generation of bids. Secondly, we introduce a consumer-side reinforcement learning bidding strategy which enables rational behavior by the generation and selection of bids. Thirdly, we evaluate and compare this bidding strategy against a truth-telling bidding strategy for two kinds of market mechanisms – one centralized and one decentralized
Optimal No-regret Learning in Repeated First-price Auctions
We study online learning in repeated first-price auctions with censored
feedback, where a bidder, only observing the winning bid at the end of each
auction, learns to adaptively bid in order to maximize her cumulative payoff.
To achieve this goal, the bidder faces a challenging dilemma: if she wins the
bid--the only way to achieve positive payoffs--then she is not able to observe
the highest bid of the other bidders, which we assume is iid drawn from an
unknown distribution. This dilemma, despite being reminiscent of the
exploration-exploitation trade-off in contextual bandits, cannot directly be
addressed by the existing UCB or Thompson sampling algorithms in that
literature, mainly because contrary to the standard bandits setting, when a
positive reward is obtained here, nothing about the environment can be learned.
In this paper, by exploiting the structural properties of first-price
auctions, we develop the first learning algorithm that achieves
regret bound when the bidder's private values are
stochastically generated. We do so by providing an algorithm on a general class
of problems, which we call monotone group contextual bandits, where the same
regret bound is established under stochastically generated contexts. Further,
by a novel lower bound argument, we characterize an lower
bound for the case where the contexts are adversarially generated, thus
highlighting the impact of the contexts generation mechanism on the fundamental
learning limit. Despite this, we further exploit the structure of first-price
auctions and develop a learning algorithm that operates sample-efficiently (and
computationally efficiently) in the presence of adversarially generated private
values. We establish an regret bound for this algorithm,
hence providing a complete characterization of optimal learning guarantees for
this problem
Learning users' interests by quality classification in market-based recommender systems
Recommender systems are widely used to cope with the problem of information overload and, to date, many recommendation methods have been developed. However, no one technique is best for all users in all situations. To combat this, we have previously developed a market-based recommender system that allows multiple agents (each representing a different recommendation method or system) to compete with one another to present their best recommendations to the user. In our system, the marketplace encourages good recommendations by rewarding the corresponding agents who supplied them according to the users’ ratings of their suggestions. Moreover, we have theoretically shown how our system incentivises the agents to bid in a manner that ensures only the best recommendations are presented. To do this effectively in practice, however, each agent needs to be able to classify its recommendations into different internal quality levels, learn the users’ interests for these different levels, and then adapt its bidding behaviour for the various levels accordingly. To this end, in this paper we develop a reinforcement learning and Boltzmann exploration strategy that the recommending agents can exploit for these tasks. We then demonstrate that this strategy does indeed help the agents to effectively obtain information about the users’ interests which, in turn, speeds up the market convergence and enables the system to rapidly highlight the best recommendations
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