Historical Political Institutions as Blueprints for Multi-Agent LLM Systems
A recent paper on arXiv (2604.27691) posits that multi-agent systems utilizing large language models encounter coordination challenges akin to those faced by complex societies in history, specifically in organizing collective efforts among agents with cognitive limitations. The researchers adapt seven historical political structures derived from four established governance models into functional multi-agent frameworks, examining the trade-offs related to efficiency versus error correction, centralization versus decentralization, and specialization versus redundancy.
Key facts
- Paper ID: arXiv:2604.27691
- Announce type: new
- Focuses on coordination problems in multi-agent LLM systems
- Draws from historical political institutions across civilizations
- Identifies key trade-offs: efficiency vs error correction, centralization vs distribution, specialization vs redundancy
- Translates seven historical institutions into multi-agent architectures
- Covers four canonical governance patterns
- Evaluates architectures empirically
Entities
Institutions
- arXiv