Capability-based task allocation in emergency-response environments: A coalition-formation approach

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Abstract

This paper addresses coalition formation, based on agent capabilities, centered on task allocation in emergency-response environments (EREs). EREs are environments that need fast task completion as their main requirement. We propose a team-based organization model, based on an existing organization model for adaptive complex systems. The model has some key characteristics that are beneficial for EREs: agents act in dynamic, open domains; agents collaborate in completing group tasks; agents may have similar types of capabilities, but at difierent levels; tasks need different agent capabilities, at collective different levels; and agents are supervised in a partially decentralized manner. We formulate task allocation as a capability-based coalition-formation problem, propose a greedy myopic algorithm to form coalitions, and compare it with F-Max-Sum, another effcient myopic algorithm. Experiments in which utility is measured show that the capability-based approach outperforms the role-based one. The numerical experiments suggest that the proposed task allocation method is possibly scalable with growing numbers of agents. © Tübi̇tak..

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Fatemi, A., Zamanifar, K., & Nematbakhsh, N. (2013). Capability-based task allocation in emergency-response environments: A coalition-formation approach. Turkish Journal of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, 21(4), 1166–1181. https://doi.org/10.3906/elk-1105-49

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