← Home

Quick answer

Multi-agent systems (MAS) increasingly solve complex tasks by orchestrating agents and tools selected from rapidly growing marketplaces. As these marketplaces expand, many candidates become functionally overlapping, making selection not just a retrieval problem: beyond filtering relevant agents, an...

Claim

Learning to Recommend Multi-Agent Subgraphs from Calling Trees

Xinyuan Song·
Liang Zhao

ABSTRACT

Multi-agent systems (MAS) increasingly solve complex tasks by orchestrating agents and tools selected from rapidly growing marketplaces. As these marketplaces expand, many candidates become functionally overlapping, making selection not just a retrieval problem: beyond filtering relevant agents, an orchestrator must choose options that are reliable, compatible with the current execution context, and able to cooperate with other selected agents. Existing recommender systems -- largely built for item-level ranking from flat user-item logs -- do not directly address the structured, sequential, and interaction-dependent nature of agent orchestration. We address this gap by \textbf{formulating agent recommendation in MAS as a constrained decision problem} and introducing a generic \textbf{constrained recommendation framework} that first uses retrieval to build a compact candidate set conditioned on the current subtask and context, and then performs \textbf{utility optimization} within this feasible set using a learned scorer that accounts for relevance, reliability, and interaction effects. We ground both the formulation and learning signals in \textbf{historical calling trees}, which capture the execution structure of MAS (parent-child calls, branching dependencies, and local cooperation patterns) beyond what flat logs provide. The framework supports two complementary settings: \textbf{agent-level recommendation} (select the next agent/tool) and \textbf{system-level recommendation} (select a small, connected agent team/subgraph for coordinated execution). To enable systematic evaluation, we construct a unified calling-tree benchmark by normalizing invocation logs from eight heterogeneous multi-agent corpora into a shared structured representation.

Review Snapshot

Explore ratings

0.0
★★★★★
0 ratings
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Recommendation

0%

recommend this content.

Review this content

Share your opinion to help other learners triage faster.

Write a review

Invite a reviewer

Invite someone by email to share an invited review for Learning to Recommend Multi-Agent Subgraphs from Calling Trees.

Author Inquiries

Public questions about this content. Attendemia will route your question to the author. Vote on the most important ones. No guarantee of response.
Post an inquiry
Sort by: Most helpful