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Enhancing multi-agent coordination via dual-channel consensus - EurekAlert


Successful coordination in multi-agent systems requires agents to achieve consensus. Previous works propose methods through information sharing, such as explicit information sharing via communication protocols or exchanging information implicitly via behavior prediction. However, these methods may fail in the absence of communication channels or due to biased modeling. In this work, researchers propose to develop dual-channel consensus (DuCC) via contrastive representation learning for fully cooperative multi-agent systems, which does not need explicit communication and avoids biased modeling. DuCC comprises two types of consensus: temporally extended consensus within each agent (inner-agent consensus) and mutual consensus across agents (inter-agent consensus). To achieve DuCC, researchers design two objectives to learn representations of slow environmental features for inner-agent consensus and to realize cognitive consistency as inter-agent consensus. Their DuCC is highly general and can be flexibly combined with various MARL algorithms. The extensive experiments on StarCraft multi-agent challenge and Google research football demonstrate that their method efficiently reaches consensus and performs superiorly to state-of-the-art MARL algorithms.

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