Swarm of Interacting Agents in Random Environments
Speaker: Prof. Max-Olivier Hongler

Time: 14h00, Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Location:
Room semina, Floor 5th, Building A6, Institute of Mathematics, Hanoi
Abstract:
Swarms of flocking birds, schools of fishes and similar collective evolutions are due to specific mutual interactions which connect the agents forming  large societies. A natural mathematical approach to stylize such types of flocking phenomena is to study the behaviour of the set of solutions of large systems of stochastic differential equations. As actual societies of agents may be either homogeneous, (agents are indistinguishable) or heterogeneous, (a small subgroup of agent act differently), the suitable mathematical frameworks will obviously also differ accordingly. In the seminar, I intend  to construct analytically soluble models of swarm dynamics for both homo- and heterogeneous situations. These exactly soluble models explicitly unveil how, by suitably tuning external control parameters, mutual interactions may generate bifurcations from individual disorganized behaviors to stable collective spatio-temporal evolution patterns. Mean-field games and feedback particles filters are some recent mathematical tools which enter into the proposed mathematical modelling.

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