Skip to main content
Statistics
STAT
Statistics
Study
Prospective Students
Current Students
Research
Research Areas
Research Groups
People
All People
Faculty
Affiliate Faculty
Instructional Faculty
Research Scientists
Research Staff
Postdoctoral Fellows
Administrative Staff
Alumni
Students
News
Events
History
Al-Kindi
Al-Kindi Distinguished Statistics Lectures
Al-Kindi Student Awards
About
CEMSE Division
Apply
Models Formation
Consensus formation models with delay
Jan Haskovec, AMCS, KAUST
Oct 1, 12:00
-
13:00
KAUST
Models Formation
Individual-based models of collective behavior represent a very active research field with applications in physics (spontaneous magnetization), biology (flocking and swarming) and social sciences (opinion formation). They are also a hot topic engineering (swarm robotics). A particularly interesting aspect of the dynamics of multi-agent systems is the emergence of global self-organized patterns, while individuals typically interact only on short scales. In this talk I shall discuss the impact of delay on asymptotic consensus formation in Hegselmann-Krause-type models, where agents adapt their „opinions“ (in broad sense) to the ones of their close neighbors. We shall understand the two principial types/sources of delay - information propagation and processing - and explain their qualitatively different impacts on the consensus dynamics. We then discuss various mathematical methods that provide asymptotic consensus results in the respective settings: Lyapunov functional-type approach, direct estimates, convexity arguments and forward-backward estimates.