AAMAS 2019 tutorial: Designing Agents' Preferences, Beliefs, and
Identities
Brief description:
We often assume that each agent has a well-defined identity, well-defined
preferences over outcomes, and well-defined beliefs about the world.
However, when designing agents, we in fact need to specify where the
boundaries between one agent and another in the system lie, what objective
functions these agents aim to maximize, and to some extent even what belief
formation processes they use. What is the right way to do so? As more and
more AI systems are deployed in the world, this question becomes
increasingly important. In this tutorial, I will show how it can be
approached from the perspectives of decision theory, game theory, social
choice theory, and the algorithmic and computational aspects of these
fields. (No previous background required.)
A AAAI'19 blue sky writeup on a subset of these ideas can be found here:
https://users.cs.duke.edu/~conitzer/designingAAAI19.pdf
Main
slides: pptx, pdf.
Game theory review
slides: pptx,
pdf.
Speaker bio:
Vincent Conitzer is the
Kimberly J. Jenkins University Professor of New Technologies and Professor
of Computer Science, Professor of Economics, and Professor of Philosophy at
Duke University. He received Ph.D. (2006) and M.S. (2003) degrees in
Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and an A.B. (2001) degree
in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University. Conitzer works on
artificial intelligence (AI). Much of his work has focused on AI and game
theory, for example designing algorithms for the optimal strategic
placement of defensive resources. More recently, he has started to work on
AI and ethics: how should we determine the objectives that AI systems
pursue, when these objectives have complex effects on various
stakeholders?
Conitzer has received the Social Choice and Welfare Prize, a Presidential
Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the IJCAI
Computers and Thought Award, an NSF CAREER award, the inaugural Victor
Lesser dissertation award, an honorable mention for the ACM dissertation
award, and several awards for papers and service at the AAAI and AAMAS
conferences. He has also been named a Guggenheim Fellow, a Kavli Fellow, a
Bass Fellow, a Sloan Fellow, a AAAI Fellow, and one of AI's Ten to Watch.
He has served as program and/or general chair of the AAAI, AAMAS, AIES,
COMSOC, and EC conferences. Conitzer and Preston McAfee were the founding
Editors-in-Chief of the ACM Transactions on Economics and Computation
(TEAC).