AI Research & Engineering · Multi-Agent Coordination

Harmonic Coordination Theory

The Theoretical Foundation
HCT Paper

As Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) scale from single-agent tools to complex ensembles of 50+ agents, they face a 'Coordination Crisis.' Current graph-based paradigms (DAGs) model dependencies but fail to model dynamics—the qualitative aspects of 'how' agents interact. Harmonic Coordination Theory (HCT) proposes a new ontology based on musical performance theory to bridge this semantic gap.

Key Contributions

  1. A New Layer Model (Layers 0-5): Distinguishing Transport (MCP), Orchestration (LangGraph), and Semantic Coordination (HCT).

  2. Signal Theory: Moving beyond message passing to "Signals" (continuous, ambient state broadcasts) for high-bandwidth, low-latency coordination.

  3. The Musical Metaphor: Formalizing concepts like Dissonance (semantic conflict), Tempo (execution speed), and Fermata (deadlock) as rigorous engineering primitives.

Paper Structure

  • Section 1: The "Tower of Babel" in modern agent systems
  • Section 2: The Ontology - Defining the Musical vocabulary for MAS
  • Section 3: The HCT Layer Model - 6-layer stack evaluation
  • Section 4: Signal Theory - HCT Signals vs. Classic Messages
  • Section 5: Limitations - Where the metaphor breaks down
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Citation

@misc{wiest2025hct,
  title = {Harmonic Coordination Theory: A Musical Ontology for Multi-Agent Systems},
  author = {Wiest, Stefan},
  year = {2025},
  howpublished = {\url{https://stefanwiest.de/research/papers/harmonic-coordination-theory/}},
  note = {Research Preview}
}