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Mobility and Information Flow: Percolation in a Multi-Agent Model
Author(s) -
Martine Collard,
Philippe Collard,
Erick Stattner
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
procedia computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.334
H-Index - 76
ISSN - 1877-0509
DOI - 10.1016/j.procs.2012.06.007
Subject(s) - computer science , rumor , percolation (cognitive psychology) , mobility model , information flow , population , focus (optics) , percolation theory , information exchange , flow (mathematics) , agent based model , distributed computing , artificial intelligence , telecommunications , topology (electrical circuits) , linguistics , philosophy , physics , neuroscience , biology , public relations , demography , mathematics , geometry , combinatorics , sociology , political science , optics
In real world situations, each person is generally in contact with only a small fraction of the entire population and exchange information through these interactions. Their number and their frequency vary from one to another individual and may be much depending on mobility of individuals. The objective of this article is to better understand how human mobility may have an impact on mobile social networking systems. This should help to answer a question as: “How might an information, a rumor, a pathogen, etc., driven by physical proximity, spread through a population?”. We present a first stage of our work in which we focus on percolation processes as information flow mechanisms. We propose a synthetic mobility model and we define an artificial world populated by heterogeneous agents who differ in their mobility. Simulations are conducted on a multi-agent programmable environment. Our experimental results clearly demonstrate positive correlations between agent mobility factors and percolation thresholds

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