• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 58
  • 10
  • 8
  • 6
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 114
  • 114
  • 114
  • 24
  • 16
  • 12
  • 12
  • 11
  • 10
  • 10
  • 10
  • 9
  • 9
  • 9
  • 8
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

An Agent-Based Model of Ant Colony Energy and Population Dynamics: Effects of Temperature and Food Fluctuation

Xiaohui, Guo 01 August 2014 (has links)
The ant colony, known as a self-organized system, can adapt to the environment by a series of negative and positive feedbacks. There is still a lack of mechanistic understanding of how the factors, such as temperature and food, coordinate the labor of ants. According to the Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MTE), the metabolic rate could control ecological process at all levels. To analyze self-organized process of ant colony, we constructed an agent-based model to simulate the energy and population dynamics of ant colony. After parameterizing the model, we ran 20 parallel simulations for each experiment and parameter sweeps to find patterns and dependencies in the food and energy flow of the colony. Ultimately this model predicted that ant colonies can respond to changes of temperature and food availability and perform differently. We hope this study can improve our understanding on the self-organized process of ant colony.
52

Artificial intelligence solutions for models of dynamic land use change

Wu, Ning January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
53

The effect of sex ratio on male reproductive success in painted turtles, Chrysemys picta

Hughes, Elinor Jane 25 August 2011 (has links)
Sex ratio theory suggests that the strength of intersexual selection will increase as a population more male-biased; reflecting increased selectivity in mate choice. Populations of pond turtle have varying adult sex ratios, in painted turtles (Chrysemys picta), reported sex ratios range from female biased (1:3) to male biased (3:1). I investigated the effect of sex ratio on male reproductive success (quantified as “fertilization success”) in painted turtles. I examined the mating system of painted turtles in a female-biased population using microsatellite paternity analysis, relating variation in male fertilization success to male phenotype and offspring survival, employed ex situ behavioural observation to clarify the mechanism behind the variation in male fertilization success and used agent-based modeling to simulate the effects of changing sex ratio, population density and proportions of male phenotype on male fertilization success. Small males contributed sperm to a greater number of clutches than did larger males, but were not more likely to reproduce in a season than larger males. There was no offspring fitness advantage related to male body size and no relationship between male claw length and fertilization success. Large male painted turtles courted at a higher frequency than small males. I found no relationship between male courtship behavior and claw length. Females showed no preference for males of any phenotype. Agent-based simulations were based on the distribution of best fit from the observed data; an amalgam of two Poisson distributions, each with its own probability of success and proportional representation in the final distribution. Increased female sex ratio bias, increased population density and increased proportions of “more successful” males all increased the mean and variance of male fertilization success, based on increased encounter rate among turtles. Small and large male painted turtles enjoy different fertilization success. It is uncertain whether this difference is based on active female choice, cryptic female choice, sperm competition or a combination of factors. Sex ratio simulations predict the opposite result as that predicted by sex ratio theory. These contrary results should be compared to simulations manipulating choosiness and field data from painted turtle populations to clarify mechanisms influencing male reproductive success.
54

Stochastic agent-based modelling for reality : dynamic discrete choice analysis with interaction

Takama, Takeshi January 2005 (has links)
This D.Phil. thesis develops a new agent-based simulation model to improve the results of analysis, which solely uses discrete choice modelling, as well as to analyse the effects of a road user charging scheme for the Upper Derwent Valley in the Peak District National Park. The advantages of discrete choice analysis are well known. However, results with these conventional conventional approaches, which conduct analysis solely with discrete choice models, can be biased if interaction and learning effects are significant. The Minority Game, in which agents try to choose the option of the minority side, is an appropriate tool to deal with these problems. The situation in the Upper Derwent Valley can be explained with economic game theories and the Minority Game. The two approaches mutually help to analyse the situation in the Upper Derwent Valley leading to the development of a stochastic Minority Game. The stochastic Minority Game was tested with an online game (questionnaire), which was played 3,886 times by response in all around the world. The practical part of this thesis examines the components of the stochastic Minority Game with the data collected around the Upper Derwent Valley. The main data was collected using a stated preference survey. Overall, 700 questionnaires were distributed and 323 of them were returned (i.e. a return rate of 46.1 %). In the practical part, the agent-based model has four sub modules: 1) Multinomial mixed logit model for mode choice, 2) Binary logit model for parking location choice, 3) Markov queue model for parking network, and 4) the Minority Game for parking congestion and learning. This simulation model produces comprehensive outputs including mode choices, congestion levels, and user utilities. The results show that the road user charging scheme reduces car demand in the Upper Derwent Valley and ensures a reduction in congestion at the parking areas. The model also shows that an exemption will increase the utilities of elderly visitors without substantially sacrificing those of younger visitors. In conclusion, the simulation model demonstrated that oversimplification in conventional approaches solely using discrete choice models gave significant biases when real world problems were analysed.
55

Investitionsanpassungen im Produktwettbewerb : eine Simulationsanalyse am Beispiel der pharmazeutischen Industrie /

Schütte, Tino. January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: Dresden, Techn. Universiẗat, Diss., 2009.
56

Information Pooling Bias in Collaborative Cyber Forensics

January 2014 (has links)
abstract: Cyber threats are growing in number and sophistication making it important to continually study and improve all dimensions of cyber defense. Human teamwork in cyber defense analysis has been overlooked even though it has been identified as an important predictor of cyber defense performance. Also, to detect advanced forms of threats effective information sharing and collaboration between the cyber defense analysts becomes imperative. Therefore, through this dissertation work, I took a cognitive engineering approach to investigate and improve cyber defense teamwork. The approach involved investigating a plausible team-level bias called the information pooling bias in cyber defense analyst teams conducting the detection task that is part of forensics analysis through human-in-the-loop experimentation. The approach also involved developing agent-based models based on the experimental results to explore the cognitive underpinnings of this bias in human analysts. A prototype collaborative visualization tool was developed by considering the plausible cognitive limitations contributing to the bias to investigate whether a cognitive engineering-driven visualization tool can help mitigate the bias in comparison to off-the-shelf tools. It was found that participant teams conducting the collaborative detection tasks as part of forensics analysis, experience the information pooling bias affecting their performance. Results indicate that cognitive friendly visualizations can help mitigate the effect of this bias in cyber defense analysts. Agent-based modeling produced insights on internal cognitive processes that might be contributing to this bias which could be leveraged in building future visualizations. This work has multiple implications including the development of new knowledge about the science of cyber defense teamwork, a demonstration of the advantage of developing tools using a cognitive engineering approach, a demonstration of the advantage of using a hybrid cognitive engineering methodology to study teams in general and finally, a demonstration of the effect of effective teamwork on cyber defense performance. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Applied Psychology 2014
57

The Impacts of Geography and Climate Change on Magdalenian Social Networks

January 2017 (has links)
abstract: This dissertation uses a comparative approach to investigate long-term human- environment interrelationships in times of climate change. It uses Geographical Information Systems and ecological models to reconstruct the Magdalenian (~20,000- 14,000 calibrated years ago) environments of the coastal mountainous zone of Cantabria (Northwest Spain) and the interior valleys of the Dordogne (Southwest France) to contextualize the social networks that could have formed during a time of high climate and resource variability. It simulates the formation of such networks in an agent-based model, which documents the processes underlying the formation of archaeological assemblages, and evaluates the potential impacts of climate-topography interactions on cultural transmission. This research then reconstructs the Magdalenian social networks visible through a multivariate statistical analysis of stylistic similarities among portable art objects. As these networks cannot be analyzed directly to infer social behavior, their characteristics are compared to the results of the agent-based model, which provide characteristics estimates of the Magdalenian latent social networks that most likely produced the empirical archaeological assemblage studied. This research contributes several new results, most of which point to the advantages of using an inter-disciplinary approach to the study of the archaeological record. It demonstrates the benefits of using an agent-based model to parse social data from long- term palimpsests. It shows that geographical and environmental contexts affect the structure of social networks, which in turn affects the transmission of ideas and goods that flow through it. This shows the presence of human-environment interactions that not only affected our ancestors’ reaction to resource insecurities, but also led them to innovate and improve the productivity of their own environment. However, it also suggests that such alterations may have reduced the populations’ resilience to strong climatic changes, and that the region with diverse resources provided a more stable and resilient environment than the region transformed to satisfy the immediate needs of its population. / Dissertation/Thesis / Appendix_D_Sites_Dates / Appendix_E_Flowchart_Biome_Reconstruction / Appendix_H_Flowchart_ABM / Appendix_I_Flowchart_Social_Network / Appendix_J_Portable_Art_Objects / Appendix_J_Art_Characteristics / Appendix_L_Poster_Summary / Appendix_A_Prehistoric_Fauna / Appendix_B_Modern_PFT_Distribution / Appendix_C_Prehistoric_PFT_Distribution / Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2017
58

Um modelo baseado em agentes aplicado aos leilões de energia eólica do Brasil. / An agent based model applied to the brazilian wind power energy auctions.

Marcos Roberto Machado 08 December 2016 (has links)
Este trabalho adota a técnica de simulação baseada em agentes para analisar o processo de precificação de energia comercializada no ambiente de contratação regulada (leilões) do mercado elétrico do Brasil. Nesse contexto, são simulados leilões de energia nova - produto fonte eólica. O simulador dos leilões de energia do Brasil foi construído através de programação realizada em matlab. Nesse programa, é possível comparar a escolha de lances de vendedores participantes nos pleitos. Os agentes (vendedores) participantes dos leilões aprendem com o decorrer dos leilões simulados. A aprendizagem é determinada através da utilização de variação do algoritmo Q-learning. Os resultados claramente demonstram que as técnicas de aprendizagem consideradas têm resultados mais favoráveis do que escolhas aleatórias (sem aprendizagem). Considerando outro ponto de vista, é possível verificar diferença de média de preços nos leilões entre os perfis de geradores públicos e privados. Além disso, é possível afirmar que o preço da energia se altera dada alteração na participação relativa de vendedores públicos ou privados nos pleitos. / This thesis adopts an agent based simulation in order to analyses the pricing process of energy that is negotiate by auctions in Brazil. In this work, wind energy power auctions are simulate. The model was developed in Matlab platform, and so, it was possible to compare the bidding process of the players in those auctions. The players learn during the auctions, and the process of learning is defined by a variation of the Q-learning algorithm. The results of the research show that when Q-learning is considered by generators there are more benefits than it is not. From another point of view, it is possible to say that there is difference between the prices of public and private players (enterprises that sell Wind energy). Besides it is possible to say that when the number of public and private players in an auction change the energy price.
59

Finanças comportamentais e o estudo de reações no mercado de capitais através de modelos baseados em agentes

Faria, Paulo Roberto Domingues de 02 February 2010 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-03-15T19:26:50Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Paulo Roberto Domingues de Faria.pdf: 1135125 bytes, checksum: 6edb1659db23a9f945a0d8a4edd49911 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010-02-02 / Fundo Mackenzie de Pesquisa / Market efficiency and rationality of economic agents are among the main subjects for debate in the area of Finance. With the development of the field of study of Behavioral Finance some serious works have been developed to improve the financial models with the incorporation of social and psychological elements to the financial theory. This paper presents some of the assumptions of the modern theory of finance and the main ideas of behavioral finance. It also presents empirical research involving the simulation of heterogeneous agents in an artificial stock market. The objective is to evaluate if the interaction of these agents can impact the behavior of asset prices in a different way from that expected by the traditional finance theories. / Entre os principais assuntos em discussão na área de Finanças estão as questões relacionadas à eficiência de mercado e à racionalidade dos agentes econômicos, que se apresentam como premissa para os principais modelos de finanças. Nos últimos anos surgiram trabalhos com o objetivo de aperfeiçoar esses modelos e suas premissas, a partir da incorporação de elementos sociais e psicológicos à teoria financeira. Esses trabalhos deram origem ao campo de estudos de Finanças Comportamentais. Esta dissertação apresenta algumas das premissas da teoria moderna de finanças e os principais pressupostos das finanças comportamentais. Além disso, apresenta pesquisa empírica envolvendo a simulação do comportamento de agentes heterogêneos em um mercado acionário artificial, utilizando o método de simulação baseada em agentes. Os resultados visam avaliar se a interação dos agentes pode impactar o comportamento de preços dos ativos de forma diferente da prevista pelas teorias de finanças.
60

Modelování oceňování projektů / Modeling projects work

Sekerka, Radko January 2009 (has links)
In this thesis we present model of the human work process on projects using multi-agent model. Within the project management plan is carried out comparisons with the fact not only in the context of subsequent checks, but also in the course of the project. One of the most item is cost of human resources. To increase efficiency and control over the actual cost to introducing a range of organizations link the accounting system to a system of reporting work. Such a system registry of the work is not only complex, but also demanding in terms of managing the time gap between the creation of estimates and their own work. In general, there may be several variants of complications such as delay work on the project because of inaccurate estimates of job performance and therefore insufficient funds in the accounts sections and stages of the project. The aim of this work is to find the characteristics of such projects for which this system work. In the first part we are addressed basic theoretical assumptions for modeling work in the field of project management and multi-agent modeling. Next part relates to the creation of multi-agent model, including detailed characteristics and verification. At the end of this research are described a several experiments with the model and analysis results.

Page generated in 0.0582 seconds