<p><p>How do we design a self-organizing system? Is it possible to validate and control non-deterministic dynamics? What is the right balance between the emergent patterns that bring robustness, adaptability and scalability, and the traditional need for verification and validation of the outcomes?</
Advances in Applied Self-organizing Systems
β Scribed by Mikhail Prokopenko (auth.), Mikhail Prokopenko PhD, MA, MSc (Hon) (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer London
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 668
- Series
- Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The main challenge faced by designers of self-organizing systems is how to validate and control non-deterministic dynamics. Over-engineering the system may completely suppress self-organization with an outside influence, eliminating emergent patterns and decreasing robustness, adaptability and scalability. Whilst leaving too much non-determinism in the systemβs behaviour may make its verification and validation almost impossible. This book presents the state-of-the-practice in successfully engineered self-organizing systems, and examines ways to balance design and self organization in the context of applications.
As demonstrated throughout, finding this balance helps to deal with diverse practical challenges. The book begins with the more established fields of traffic management and structural health monitoring, building up towards robotic teams, solving challenging tasks deployed in tough environments. The second half of the book follows with a deeper look into the micro-level, and considers local interactions between agents. These interactions lead towards self-modifying digital circuitry and self-managing grids, self-organizing data visualization and intrusion detection in computer networks, immunocomputing and nature-inspired computation, and eventually to artificial life. The case studies described illustrate the richness of the topic and provide guidance to its intricate areas.
Many algorithms proposed and discussed in this volume are biologically inspired and readers will also gain an insight into cellular automata, genetic algorithms, artificial immune systems, snake-like locomotion, ant foraging, birds flocking and mutualistic biological ecosystems, amongst others. Demonstrating the practical relevance and applicability of self-organization, this book will be of interest to advanced students and researchers in a wide range of fields.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XI
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Design vs. Self-organization....Pages 3-17
Foundations and Formalizations of Self-organization....Pages 19-37
Front Matter....Pages 39-39
Self-Organizing Traffic Lights: A Realistic Simulation....Pages 41-50
A Self-organizing Sensing System for Structural Health Monitoring of Aerospace Vehicles....Pages 51-76
Decentralized Decision Making for Multiagent Systems....Pages 77-104
Learning Mutation Strategies for Evolution and Adaptation of a Simulated Snakebot....Pages 105-126
Self-Organization as Phase Transition in Decentralized Groups of Robots: A Study Based on Boltzmann Entropy....Pages 127-146
Distributed Control of Microscopic Robots in Biomedical Applications....Pages 147-174
Front Matter....Pages 175-175
Self-Organizing Digital Systems....Pages 177-216
Self-organizing Nomadic Services in Grids....Pages 217-246
Immune System Support for Scheduling....Pages 247-270
Formal Immune Networks: Self-Organization and Real-World Applications....Pages 271-290
A Model for Self-Organizing Data Visualization Using Decentralized Multiagent Systems....Pages 291-324
Emergence of Traveling Localizations in Mutualistic-Excitation Media....Pages 325-346
Front Matter....Pages 347-347
A Turing Test for Emergence....Pages 349-364
Back Matter....Pages 365-375
β¦ Subjects
Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics); Pattern Recognition; Simulation and Modeling; Theory of Computation; Computer Systems Organization and Communication Networks; Coding and Information Theory
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