4.5 Article

INVISIBLE CONTROL OF SELF-ORGANIZING AGENTS LEAVING UNKNOWN ENVIRONMENTS

Journal

SIAM JOURNAL ON APPLIED MATHEMATICS
Volume 76, Issue 4, Pages 1683-1710

Publisher

SIAM PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.1137/15M1017016

Keywords

pedestrian models; agent-based models; kinetic models; evacuation; herding effect; soft control

Funding

  1. European Union [ERC-STG 306274, ERC-ADG 668998]
  2. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [W1244] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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In this paper we are concerned with multiscale modeling, control, and simulation of self-organizing agents leaving an unknown area under limited visibility, with special emphasis on crowds. We first introduce a new microscopic model characterized by an exploration phase and an evacuation phase. The main ingredients of the model are an alignment term, accounting for the herding effect typical of uncertain behavior, and a random walk, accounting for the need to explore the environment under limited visibility. We consider both metrical and topological interactions. Moreover, a few special agents, the leaders, not recognized as such by the crowd, are hidden in the crowd with a special controlled dynamic. Next, relying on a Boltzmann approach, we derive a mesoscopic model for a continuum density of followers, coupled with a microscopic description for the leaders' dynamics. Finally, optimal control of the crowd is studied. It is assumed that leaders aim at steering the crowd towards the exits so to ease the evacuation and limit clogging effects, and locally optimal behavior of leaders is computed. Numerical simulations show the efficiency of the control techniques in both microscopic and mesoscopic settings. We also perform a real experiment with people to study the feasibility of such a bottom-up control technique.

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