DocumentCode :
2918790
Title :
Social Behavior in a Team of Autonomous Sensors
Author :
Sakamoto, Yasuaki ; Nickerson, Jeffrey V.
Author_Institution :
Stevens Inst. of Technol., Hoboken
fYear :
2007
fDate :
23-24 May 2007
Firstpage :
189
Lastpage :
192
Abstract :
Probabilities of physical attack are often determined by various environmental factors. As the environment changes, the probability of attack associated with an area changes. In such dynamic environments, autonomous sensors are potentially useful to optimally cover regions that have high probabilities of attack. We present results from agent-based simulations, in which autonomous sensors "forage" a space to find areas with high attack probabilities. Simple heuristics often resulted in optimal coverage of the attack regions, without a centralized control. By varying how quickly sensors respond to a threat, we can encourage some sensors to cover some areas, and others to hang back and defend different areas, allowing them to distribute optimally as a team. The idea of making team members hang back may seem counterintuitive. In fact, people often converge all at once to respond to an immediate threat. Our results show that it is useful to have some agents remain behind, in case the environment changes.
Keywords :
mobile agents; multi-agent systems; probability; sensors; agent-based simulation; attack region; autonomous sensors; dynamic environment; environmental factors; immediate threat; physical attack probability; social behavior; threat response; Autonomous agents; Centralized control; Environmental factors; Mobile agents; Monitoring; Security; Signal detection; Technology management;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Intelligence and Security Informatics, 2007 IEEE
Conference_Location :
New Brunswick, NJ
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-1329-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISI.2007.379556
Filename :
4258695
Link To Document :
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