Pattern Formation in Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Swarms: Differences Between Versatile and Specialized Agents
2007 IEEE Symposium on Artificial Life,
pages 311--316,
doi: 10.1109/ALIFE.2007.367649
- Apr 2007
In collective robotics, researchers are successfully
using models derived from swarm insect behavior to solve
problems like coordination or task allocation. It is often assumed
that in a homogeneous group of agents, every agent has to
become more complicated when the complexity of the task
increases, which decreases simplicity of design and robustness.
Role diversification and therefore task specialization within a
group may help counter the need for more complex agents.
Because experiments on self-organization and dynamic task
allocation in robot populations focused mainly on homogeneous
groups, the relation between these models and pre-specified
role diversification remains mainly unknown. In this work
the interchangeability of homogeneous and heterogeneous agent
populations is investigated. It is shown that in a simple simulated
environment, a mixed population of specialized agents can not
be easily substituted by a homogeneous group of multi-tasking
agents. Results lead to the conclusion that the ability of dynamic
task switching, i.e. adaptive task allocation in respect to changes
in the environment, have strong effects on the behavior on a
population level. Although a pre-defined heterogeneous group
can produce the same result for a given environment and a
specific population composition, the group behavior differs when
the environment changes.
@InProceedings{MT07, author = {Magg, Sven and te Boekhorst, Rene}, title = {Pattern Formation in Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Swarms: Differences Between Versatile and Specialized Agents}, booktitle = {2007 IEEE Symposium on Artificial Life}, editors = {}, number = {}, volume = {}, pages = {311--316}, year = {2007}, month = {Apr}, publisher = {}, doi = {10.1109/ALIFE.2007.367649}, }