This work was done during one weekend by research workshop participants and does not represent the work of Apart Research.
ApartSprints
MASec
Accepted at the 
MASec
 research sprint on 
February 12, 2024

Fishing for the answer: Mapping the flow of information in LLM agent groups using lessons from fish schools

Understanding how information flows through groups of interacting agents is crucial for the control of multi-agent systems in many domains, and for predicting novel capabilities that might emerge from such interactions. This is especially true for new multi-agent configurations of frontier models that are rapidly being developed and deployed for various tasks, compounding the already complex dynamics of the underlying models. Given the significance of this problem in terms of achieving alignment for multi-agent security in the age of autonomous and agentic systems, we aim for the research to contribute to the development of strategies that can address the challenges posed. The purpose in this particular case is to highlight ways to enhance the credibility and trust guarantees of multi-agent AI systems, for instance by specifically tackling issues such as the spread of disinformation. Here, we explore the effects of the structure of group interactions on how information is transmitted, within the context of LLM agents. With a simple experimental setup, we show the complexities that are introduced when groups of LLM agents interact in a simulated environment. We hope this can provide a useful framework for additional extensions examining AI security and cooperation, to prevent the spread of false information and detect collusion or group manipulation.

By 
Matthew Lutz, Nyasha Duri
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4th place
3rd place
2nd place
1st place
 by peer review