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  4. Diversity and Specialization in Collaborative Swarm Systems
 
conference paper

Diversity and Specialization in Collaborative Swarm Systems

Li, L.
•
Martinoli, A.  
•
Abu-Mostafa, Y.
Balch, T.
•
C. Anderson, C.
2003
Proc. of the Second Int. Workshop on Mathematics and Algorithms of Social Insects

This paper addresses qualitative and quantitative diversity and specialization issues in the frame- work of self-organizing, distributed, artificial systems. Both diversity and specialization are obtained via distributed learning from initially homogeneous swarms. While measuring diversity essentially quantifies differences among the individuals, assessing the degree of specialization implies to correlate the swarm’s heterogeneity with its overall performance. Starting from a stick-pulling experiment in collective robotics, a task that requires the collaboration of two robots, we abstract and generalize in simulation the task constraints to k robots collaborating sequentially or in parallel. We investi- gate quantitatively the influence of task constraints and type of reinforcement signals on diversity and specialization in these collaborative experiments. Results show that, though diversity is not explicitly rewarded in our learning algorithm and there is no explicit communication among agents, the swarm becomes specialized after learning. The degree of specialization is affected strongly by environmental conditions and task constraints, and reveals characteristics related to performance and learning in a more consistent and clearer way than diversity does.

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Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Li, L.
Martinoli, A.  
Abu-Mostafa, Y.
Editors
Balch, T.
•
C. Anderson, C.
Date Issued

2003

Published in
Proc. of the Second Int. Workshop on Mathematics and Algorithms of Social Insects
Start page

91

End page

98

Subjects

collaborative swarm systems

•

distributed learning

•

specialization

•

diversity

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
DISAL  
Available on Infoscience
November 4, 2004
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/172175
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