Just-in-Time Backfilling in Multi-Agent Scheduling
Gallagher, Anthony (Carnegie Mellon University) | Hunsberger, Luke (Vassar College) | Smith, Stephen F. (Carnegie Mellon University)
This paper addresses the problem of how a group of agents cooperating on a complex plan with interdependent actions can coordinate their scheduling and execution of those actions, particularly in domains where actions may fail or have uncertain durations. If actions fail (or fail to meet their deadlines), the repercussions for the rest of the team's plan can be dramatic. This paper presents a pro-active strategy, called Just-in-Time Backfilling (JIT-BF), that agents can use to increase the fault tolerance of their interdependent schedules by identifying actions in danger of failing and inserting redundant (or back-up) actions into their schedules. The insertion of redundant actions can be done locally (i.e., by the agent whose action is in danger of failing) or through negotiations with the rest of the team. The computations performed by agents following the JIT-BF strategy depend on probabilistic models of action durations and the ``quality'' achieved by successfully executing actions. The paper presents an experimental evaluation of the JIT-BF strategy within a simulated real-time dynamic environment that demonstrates that teams using the pro-active JIT-BF strategy significantly out-perform teams that rely solely on reactive strategies.
May-21-2009
- Country:
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Allegheny County > Pittsburgh (0.14)
- Genre:
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.47)
- Industry:
- Government > Regional Government (0.47)
- Technology: