Emergent Architecture in Self Organized Swarm Systems for Military Applications
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
7-12-2008
Abstract
Many sectors of the military are interested in Self-Organized (SO) systems because of their flexibility, versatility and economics. The military is researching and employing autonomous and swarming ground robots, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and Water Vehicles, medical agents, and 'Cyber-craft' security agents. The processes for effectively developing these systems are still in their infancy. Currently, little effort is focused on building simple agent rules with low-level SO systems communication in order to facilitate emergent behaviors. Note that only with the use of effective control structures can the full potential of these systems realized. Presented is an innovative new paradigm for developing SO-based autonomous vehicles. Using a formal design model, the Interactive Partially Observable Markov Decision Process, a full understanding of this SO domain is possible. With this design model and a focused effort on the minimization of computational and informational complexity, emergent entangled control hierarchies allow the SO rules to operate efficiently and effectively. This work extends the formal model decomposition technique, and in doing so ties in the information theoretic optimization to develop emergent structures. Preliminary computational results reflect limited success. Abstract © ACM
Source Publication
Proceedings of the 10th Annual Conference Companion on Genetic and Evolutionary Computation (GECCO08)
Recommended Citation
Dustin J. Nowak, Gary B. Lamont, and Gilbert L. Peterson. 2008. Emergent architecture in self organized swarm systems for military applications. In Proceedings of the 10th annual conference companion on Genetic and evolutionary computation (GECCO '08). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, 1913–1920. https://doi.org/10.1145/1388969.1388999
Comments
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