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Autori principali: Renney, Harri, Nethercott, Maxim N, Renney, Nathan, Hayes, Peter
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03328
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author Renney, Harri
Nethercott, Maxim N
Renney, Nathan
Hayes, Peter
author_facet Renney, Harri
Nethercott, Maxim N
Renney, Nathan
Hayes, Peter
contents This paper formalises the literature on emerging design patterns and paradigms for Large Language Model (LLM)-enabled multi-agent systems (MAS), evaluating their practical utility across various domains. We define key architectural components, including agent orchestration, communication mechanisms, and control-flow strategies, and demonstrate how these enable rapid development of modular, domain-adaptive solutions. Three real-world case studies are tested in controlled, containerised pilots in telecommunications security, national heritage asset management, and utilities customer service automation. Initial empirical results show that, for these case studies, prototypes were delivered within two weeks and pilot-ready solutions within one month, suggesting reduced development overhead compared to conventional approaches and improved user accessibility. However, findings also reinforce limitations documented in the literature, including variability in LLM behaviour that leads to challenges in transitioning from prototype to production maturity. We conclude by outlining critical research directions for improving reliability, scalability, and governance in MAS architectures and the further work needed to mature MAS design patterns to mitigate the inherent challenges.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_03328
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle LLM-Enabled Multi-Agent Systems: Empirical Evaluation and Insights into Emerging Design Patterns & Paradigms
Renney, Harri
Nethercott, Maxim N
Renney, Nathan
Hayes, Peter
Multiagent Systems
This paper formalises the literature on emerging design patterns and paradigms for Large Language Model (LLM)-enabled multi-agent systems (MAS), evaluating their practical utility across various domains. We define key architectural components, including agent orchestration, communication mechanisms, and control-flow strategies, and demonstrate how these enable rapid development of modular, domain-adaptive solutions. Three real-world case studies are tested in controlled, containerised pilots in telecommunications security, national heritage asset management, and utilities customer service automation. Initial empirical results show that, for these case studies, prototypes were delivered within two weeks and pilot-ready solutions within one month, suggesting reduced development overhead compared to conventional approaches and improved user accessibility. However, findings also reinforce limitations documented in the literature, including variability in LLM behaviour that leads to challenges in transitioning from prototype to production maturity. We conclude by outlining critical research directions for improving reliability, scalability, and governance in MAS architectures and the further work needed to mature MAS design patterns to mitigate the inherent challenges.
title LLM-Enabled Multi-Agent Systems: Empirical Evaluation and Insights into Emerging Design Patterns & Paradigms
topic Multiagent Systems
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03328