Emergent phenomena occur due to the pattern of non-linear and distributed local interactions between the elements of a system over time. Surprisingly, agent based crowd models, in which the movement of each individual follows a limited set of simple rules, often re-produce quite closely the emergent behaviour of crowds that can be observed in re- ality. An example of such phenomena is the spontaneous self-organisation of drinking parties in the squares of cities in Spain, also known as "El Botello ?n". We revisit this case study providing an elegant stochastic process algebraic model in Bio-PEPA amenable to several forms of analyses, among which simulation and fluid flow analysis. We show that a fluid flow approximation, i.e. a deterministic reading of the average behaviour of the system, can provide an alternative and efficient way to study the same emergent behaviour as that explored in [20] where simulation was used instead. Besides empirical evidence, also an analytical justification is provided for the good correspondence found between simulation results and the fluid flow approximation

Modelling Non-linear Crowd Dynamics in Bio-PEPA

Massink M;Latella D;
2011

Abstract

Emergent phenomena occur due to the pattern of non-linear and distributed local interactions between the elements of a system over time. Surprisingly, agent based crowd models, in which the movement of each individual follows a limited set of simple rules, often re-produce quite closely the emergent behaviour of crowds that can be observed in re- ality. An example of such phenomena is the spontaneous self-organisation of drinking parties in the squares of cities in Spain, also known as "El Botello ?n". We revisit this case study providing an elegant stochastic process algebraic model in Bio-PEPA amenable to several forms of analyses, among which simulation and fluid flow analysis. We show that a fluid flow approximation, i.e. a deterministic reading of the average behaviour of the system, can provide an alternative and efficient way to study the same emergent behaviour as that explored in [20] where simulation was used instead. Besides empirical evidence, also an analytical justification is provided for the good correspondence found between simulation results and the fluid flow approximation
2011
Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione "Alessandro Faedo" - ISTI
Inglese
Giannakopoulou D., F. Orejas F. (eds.)
Fundamental Approaches to Software Engineering
FASE 2011, Fundamental Approaches to Software Engineering 2011. 14th International Conference
96
110
978-3-642-19810-6
http://www.springerlink.com/content/lw5812w5k78744m8/
Springer
Berlin
GERMANIA
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
March 26 - April 3 2011
Saarbruecken, Germany
Collective behaviour
Formal Methods
BioPEPA
Fluid flow
ID Modulo Commessa 7160 - DG.RSTL.074.006 - 074 - XXL Sviluppo di nuovi strumenti e tecniche per lo specifica e verifica formale di sistemi ad elevata granularita ; ID Modulo Commessa 4147 - ICT.P09.008.002 - 074 - Metodi e Strumenti per la Progettazione di Sistemi Software-Intensive ad Elevata Complessità ; Codice periodico JCR/ISI 00538S0 ; Area di valutazione 01 - Scienze matematiche e informatiche . PROGETTO1: CNR-DG.RSTL.074.006 - 074 - XXL Sviluppo di nuovi strumenti e tecniche per lo specifica e verifica formale di sistemi ad elevata granularita - PROGETTO 2: EU 257414 Autonomic Service-Component Ensembles FASE 2011wa held as Part of the Joint European Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2011 Progetto: ASCENS - Autonomic Service-Component Ensembles - Grant agreement: 257414
4
restricted
Massink, M; Latella, D; Bracciali, A; Hillston, J
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
   Autonomic Service-Component Ensembles
   ASCENS
   FP7
   257414
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/224061
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