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Poster

Melting Pot Contest: Charting the Future of Generalized Cooperative Intelligence

Rakshit Trivedi · Akbir Khan · Jesse Clifton · Lewis Hammond · Edgar Duéñez-Guzmán · Dipam Chakraborty · John Agapiou · Jayd Matyas · Sasha Vezhnevets · Barna Pásztor · Yunke Ao · Omar G. Younis · Jiawei Huang · Benjamin Swain · Haoyuan Qin · Deng · Ziwei Deng · Utku Erdoğanaras · Yue Zhao · Marko Tesic · Natasha Jaques · Jakob Foerster · Vincent Conitzer · José Hernández-Orallo · Dylan Hadfield-Menell · Joel Leibo

West Ballroom A-D #6507
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Wed 11 Dec 11 a.m. PST — 2 p.m. PST

Abstract:

Multi-agent AI research promises a path to develop human-like and human-compatible intelligent technologies that complement the solipsistic view of other approaches, which mostly do not consider interactions between agents. Aiming to make progress in this direction, the Melting Pot contest 2023 focused on the problem of cooperation among interacting agents and challenged researchers to push the boundaries of multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) for mixed-motive games. The contest leveraged the Melting Pot environment suite to rigorously evaluate how well agents can adapt their cooperative skills to interact with novel partners in unforeseen situations. Unlike other reinforcement learning challenges, this challenge focused on \textit{social} rather than \textit{environmental} generalisation. In particular, a population of agents performs well in Melting Pot when its component individuals are adept at finding ways to cooperate both with others in their population and with strangers. Thus Melting Pot measures \emph{cooperative intelligence}.The contest attracted over 600 participants across 100+ teams globally and was a success on multiple fronts: (i) it contributed to our goal of pushing the frontiers of MARL towards building more cooperatively intelligent agents, evidenced by several submissions that outperformed established baselines; (ii) it attracted a diverse range of participants, from independent researchers to industry affiliates and academic labs, both with strong background and new interest in the area alike, broadening the field’s demographic and intellectual diversity; and (iii) analyzing the submitted agents provided important insights, highlighting areas for improvement in evaluating agents' cooperative intelligence. This paper summarizes the design aspects and results of the contest and explores the potential of Melting Pot as a benchmark for studying Cooperative AI. We further analyze the top solutions and conclude with a discussion on promising directions for future research.

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