posted on 2003-08-01, 00:00authored byM. Bernardine Dias, Anthony Stentz
The problem of efficient multirobot coordination has risen to the forefront of robotics research in
recent years. Interest in this problem is motivated by the wide range of application domains demanding
multirobot solutions. In general, multirobot coordination strategies assume either a centralized approach,
where a single robot/agent plans for the group, or a distributed approach, where each robot is responsible
for its own planning. Inherent to many centralized approaches are several difficulties. The key advantage
of centralized approaches is that they can produce globally optimal plans. While most distributed
approaches can overcome the obstacles inherent to centralized approaches, they can only produce
suboptimal plans. This work presents the philosophy and traces the development of “TraderBots”: a
market-based architecture that is inherently distributed, but also capable of opportunistically forming
centralized sub-groups to improve efficiency. Robots are self-interested with the primary goal of
maximizing individual profits. The revenue/cost models and rules of engagement are designed so that
maximizing individual profit has the benevolent effect of moving the team toward the globally optimal
solution.