Designing Agent-Based Electronic Employment Markets |
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Authors: | William R. Gates Mark E. Nissen |
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Affiliation: | (1) Graduate School of Business and Public Policy, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943, USA;(2) Graduate School of Business and Public Policy, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA 93943, USA |
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Abstract: | Two modes of matching people with jobs prevail at present: 1) hierarchical planning and 2) distributed markets. Each has strengths and limitations, but few systems have been designed to take advantage of strengths corresponding to both. With evolving information technology, however, the job-matching process could be accomplished far more equitably and efficiently using web-based markets within the firm, and intelligent agents offer excellent potential to help both potential employees and employers find one another in a distributed, electronic marketplace. But realizing this potential goes well beyond simply changing the rules of internal job matching or making agent technology available to job searchers. Rather, the corresponding markets and technologies must be designed, together, to mutually accomplish the desired results (e.g., efficient and effective matching) and conform to necessary properties (e.g., market clearing). Through the research described in this paper, we draw from Game Theory results to assess the feasibility of using two-sided matching algorithms to address this market-design problem. We also draw from current agent research to address the information technology dimension of the problem by implementing a proof-of-concept multi-agent system to enact, automate and support the corresponding market solution. This paper integrates the key economic and technological elements required to design robust electronic employment markets. And the corresponding research provides new knowledge and insight into co-development of the requisite economic markets and agent technologies. |
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Keywords: | intelligent agents multi-agent systems web-based markets electronic commerce two-sided matching markets game theory electronic labor markets |
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