Forming coalitions in the face of uncertain rewards
AAAI '94 Proceedings of the twelfth national conference on Artificial intelligence (vol. 1)
General principles of learning-based multi-agent systems
Proceedings of the third annual conference on Autonomous Agents
An architecture for a secure service discovery service
MobiCom '99 Proceedings of the 5th annual ACM/IEEE international conference on Mobile computing and networking
Multi-agent reinforcement learning: weighting and partitioning
Neural Networks
Deterministic small-world communication networks
Information Processing Letters
OceanStore: an architecture for global-scale persistent storage
ASPLOS IX Proceedings of the ninth international conference on Architectural support for programming languages and operating systems
Naming the Unnamable: Socionics or the Sociological Turn of/to Distributed Artificial Intelligence
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Locating Data in (Small-World?) Peer-to-Peer Scientific Collaborations
IPTPS '01 Revised Papers from the First International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Infrastructure Issues and Themes for Scalable Multi-Agent Systems
Revised Papers from the International Workshop on Infrastructure for Multi-Agent Systems: Infrastructure for Agents, Multi-Agent Systems, and Scalable Multi-Agent Systems
Scalability Metrics and Analysis of Mobile Agent Systems
Revised Papers from the International Workshop on Infrastructure for Multi-Agent Systems: Infrastructure for Agents, Multi-Agent Systems, and Scalable Multi-Agent Systems
A Scalable Agent Location Mechanism
ATAL '99 6th International Workshop on Intelligent Agents VI, Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages (ATAL),
Giggle: a framework for constructing scalable replica location services
Proceedings of the 2002 ACM/IEEE conference on Supercomputing
Congregation Formation in Multiagent Systems
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Coordinated Learning to Support Resource Management in Computational Grids
P2P '02 Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing
Multiple Scales in Small-World Networks
Multiple Scales in Small-World Networks
Methods for task allocation via agent coalition formation
Artificial Intelligence
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The concept of a “community” is often an essential feature of many existing scientific collaborations. Collaboration networks generally involve bringing together participants who wish to achieve some common outcome. Scientists often work in informal collaborations to solve complex problems that require multiple types of skills. Increasingly, scientific collaborations are becoming interdisciplinary—requiring participants who posses different skills to come together. Such communities may be generally composed of participants with complimentary or similar skills—who may decide to collaborate to more efficiently solve a single large problem. If such a community wishes to utilise computational resources to undertake their work, it is useful to identify metrics that may be used to characterise their collaboration. Such metrics are useful to identify particular types of communities, or more importantly, particular features of communities that are likely to lead to successful collaborations as the number of participants (or the resources they are sharing) increases.