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AAAI
2006

Behaviosites: Manipulation of Multiagent System Behavior through Parasitic Infection

14 years 25 days ago
Behaviosites: Manipulation of Multiagent System Behavior through Parasitic Infection
In this paper we present the Behaviosite Paradigm, a new approach to coordination and control of distributed agents in a multiagent system, inspired by biological parasites with behavior manipulation properties. Behaviosites are code modules that "infect" a system, attaching themselves to agents and altering the sensory activity and actions of those agents. These behavioral changes can be used to achieve altered, potentially improved, performance of the overall system; thus, Behaviosites provide a mechanism for distributed control over a distributed system. Behaviosites need to be designed so that they are intimately familiar with the internal workings of the environment and of the agents operating within it. To demonstrate our approach, we use behaviosites to control the behavior of a swarm of simple agents. With a relatively low infection rate, a few behaviosites can engender desired behavior over the swarm as a whole: keeping it in one place, leading it through checkpoint...
Amit Shabtay, Zinovi Rabinovich, Jeffrey S. Rosens
Added 30 Oct 2010
Updated 30 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where AAAI
Authors Amit Shabtay, Zinovi Rabinovich, Jeffrey S. Rosenschein
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