Autonomous Infrastructure Provisioning and Adaptive Governance for Multi-Agent Collaboration Systems
Abstract
Techniques are described for autonomously provisioning and adapting organizational infrastructure for multi-agent project execution using external collaboration tools. An organizational requirements analyzer generates an organizational plan specifying channels with scopes, modalities, purposes, and governance levels. An infrastructure provisioner creates real-world artifacts (e.g., chat channels, documents, task boards, repository branches) via tool APIs and configures them for dual use by agents through APIs and by humans through native user interfaces, optionally adding humans as observers. A governance negotiation engine enables agents to establish and amend a self-referential governance constitution using proposals and resolution protocols, subject to human veto. A multi-modal router directs communications based on content-to-modality mappings and updates rules upon medium mismatches. An adaptive manager detects organizational events and modifies artifacts, announcing changes in a coordination channel. A human observability bridge classifies human interactions and produces periodic summaries.
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Recommended Citation
Anonymous, "Autonomous Infrastructure Provisioning and Adaptive Governance for Multi-Agent Collaboration Systems", Technical Disclosure Commons, (June 30, 2026)
https://www.tdcommons.org/dpubs_series/10655