When Should Agents Coordinate in Differentiable Sequential Decision Problems?
Caleb Probine, Su Ann Low, David Fridovich-Keil, Ufuk Topcu
- Year
- 2026
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Multi-robot teams must coordinate to operate effectively. When a team operates in an uncoordinated manner, and agents choose actions that are only individually optimal, the team's outcome can suffer. However, in many domains, coordination requires costly communication. We explore the value of coordination in a broad class of differentiable motion-planning problems. In particular, we model coordinated behavior as a spectrum: at one extreme, agents jointly optimize a common team objective, and at the other, agents make unilaterally optimal decisions given their individual decision variables, i.e., they operate at Nash equilibria. We then demonstrate that reasoning about coordination in differentiable motion-planning problems reduces to reasoning about the second-order properties of agents' objectives, and we provide algorithms that use this second-order reasoning to determine at which times a team of agents should coordinate.
Keywords
Related papers
Dynamic reconfiguration in multi-robot agent systems using embedded language models
Shokhikha Amalana Murdivien, Jongsu Park, Jumyung Um
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Hierarchical decision-making for UAVs’ game via LLM enhanced multi-agent reinforcement learning
Xinyu Dong, Bo Li, Guangyu Zhang +2 more
Aerospace Science and Technology · 2026
Formation optimization and obstacle avoidance decision-making methods for cooperative coverage search of multi-UUVs in underwater wreck areas
Haomiao Yu, Zeyuan Zhang, Yantian Ma
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Human-in-the-Loop Swarms: A Bionic Swarm Approach to Real-World Soil Mapping
Petras Swissler, Mohammadali Rashidioun, Nicholas Sahu +3 more
2026