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SCML Competition 2020 : Supply Chain Management League @ ANAC @ IJCAI | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://scml.cs.brown.edu/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Supply Chain Management League (SCML)
===================================== You are invited to submit to the second Supply Chain Management League (a part of ANAC 2020 competition @ IJCAI 2020) https://scml.cs.brown.edu Challenge --------- Design and build an autonomous agent that negotiates on behalf of a factory manager situated in a supply chain management simulation. The goal of a factory manager in SCML is to maximize its profit given its private production capabilities by negotiating trades with other agents. A factory manager can engage in several negotiations simultaneously, for which its utility functions are in general interdependent. These negotiations, and any ensuing contracts, are bilateral. Moreover, they are private to the agents involved. The full description of the game is available at http://www.yasserm.com/scml/scml2020.pdf Platform -------- Entrants to the competition will develop and submit an autonomous agent that runs on NegMAS. NegMAS is a Python-based negotiation platform in which you can create simulated worlds, like the SCM world, populated with agents capable of engaging in multiple negotiations. Participants will need to install the SCML library that runs on top of NegMAS and includes the SCML2020World environment. Using this library, you can run the SCM world with the same settings as the ones employed in ANAC 2020, or with personalized settings. SCML also includes an implementation of few sample strategies, which can serve as a sample implementation of an agent to guide participating teams. A difference from SCML2019 is that Java is not supported anymore. All agents must be implemented in Python (or have a python adapter that is developed by the participant). Submission and Live Competition ------------------------------- An unofficial live competition will be run this year, beginning February 20th. All participants are encouraged to upload early versions of their agents to the online submission site and are required to upload a working agent by May 1st. A leaderboard will be maintained, displaying the relative performance of all submitted agents, but no identifying information about the participating teams will be available. This website is also where the final versions of agents should be submitted for the official competition (at which point identifying information will become available). Participants who fail to upload a preliminary version of their agent to the live competition website by May 1st will not be allowed to enter the official competition. Participants must also submit the following (through the online submission site): 1. Team member names, affiliations, and contact information. 2. A single zip file containing the following (Please use the provided skeleton): - Agent source code. - Academic report describing the agent in PDF. Finalists will be required to submit a poster presenting their agent for possible presentation at IJCAI. Submitted code and the academic report should be considered to be in the public domain, and may be incorporated in full or part in future releases of NegMAS and/or SCML or any other media. In such cases, all team members will receive proper attribution. Evaluation ---------- An agent’s performance will be measured by its score which will be the median of the profits accrued by all its factories in all its instantiations in all simulations. Note that this is different from SCML2019, which used the mean. The two tracks (standard and collusion) will be conducted in two rounds, a qualifying round and a final round. All entrants that are not judged to break any of the SCML and ANAC submission rules will be entered into the qualifying rounds. Top-scoring agents in the qualifying round will then be entered in the final round. The teams that built the top-scoring agents will be notified in June, with the final results and awards announced at IJCAI 2020. It is expected that finalists will send a representative to the ANAC workshop at IJCAI 2020 in Japan. Three awards will be announced at IJCAI 2020 (with associated monetary rewards) corresponding to the two tracks (standard and collusion). The final version of the agent submitted by the competition deadline (May 15th) will be used in the two tracks of the SCM league. Resources --------- For more information about SCML, please refer to the following links: 1. Youtube playlist to get you started: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqvs51K2Mb8IJe5Yz5jmYrRAwvIpGU2nF 2. Live Competition Website: https://scml.cs.brown.edu 3. Full Call for Participation: http://web.tuat.ac.jp/~katfuji/ANAC2020/cfp/scml_cfp.pdf Organizing Committee -------------------- Yasser Mohammad, NEC & AIST & Assiut University (main contact) Katsuhide Fujita, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology & NEC-AIST Amy Greenwald, Brown University Mark Klein, MIT & NEC-AIST Satoshi Morinaga, NEC-AIST Shinji Nakadai, NEC-AIST Important Dates --------------- February 15, 2020 Official release of the league platform (python) February 20, 2020 Website opens for submission at https://scml.cs.brown.edu March 25, 2020 [OPTIONAL] Registering to the submission website May 1st, 2020 Preliminary submission deadline (REQUIRED) May 15th, 2020 Final submission deadline June 1, 2020 Notification to finalists mid July, 2020 Announcement of winners, monetary prize distribution and league report (during ANAC 2020 @ IJCAI 2020). Sponsors NEC-AIST AI Collaboration Research Laboratory |
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