arXiv:2603.07253v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: A significant element of human cooperative intelligence lies in our ability to identify opportunities for fruitful collaboration; and conversely to recognise when the task at hand is better pursued alone. Research on flexible cooperation in machines has left this meta-level problem largely unexplored, despite its importance for successful collaboration in heterogeneous open-ended environments. Here, we extend the typical Ad Hoc Teamwork (AHT) setting to incorporate the idea of agents having heterogeneous goals that in any given scenario may or may not overlap. We introduce a novel approach to learning policies in this setting, based on a hierarchical combination of imitation and reinforcement learning, and show that it outperforms baseline methods across extended versions of two cooperative environments. We also investigate the contribution of an auxiliary component that learns to model teammates by predicting their actions, finding that its effect on performance is inversely related to the amount of observable information about teammate goals.
Translating AI research into reality: summary of the 2025 voice AI Symposium and Hackathon
The 2025 Voice AI Symposium represented a transition from conceptual research to clinical implementation in vocal biomarker science. Hosted by the NIH-funded Bridge2AI-Voice consortium, the



