Ant-inspired density estimation via random walks

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Publication:4646201

DOI10.1073/PNAS.1706439114zbMATH Open1404.60061DBLPjournals/pnas/MuscoSL17arXiv1603.02981OpenAlexW2964180168WikidataQ46304259 ScholiaQ46304259MaRDI QIDQ4646201FDOQ4646201


Authors: Cameron Musco, Hsin-Hao Su, Nancy Lynch Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 11 January 2019

Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: Many ant species employ distributed population density estimation in applications ranging from quorum sensing [Pra05], to task allocation [Gor99], to appraisal of enemy colony strength [Ada90]. It has been shown that ants estimate density by tracking encounter rates -- the higher the population density, the more often the ants bump into each other [Pra05,GPT93]. We study distributed density estimation from a theoretical perspective. We prove that a group of anonymous agents randomly walking on a grid are able to estimate their density within a small multiplicative error in few steps by measuring their rates of encounter with other agents. Despite dependencies inherent in the fact that nearby agents may collide repeatedly (and, worse, cannot recognize when this happens), our bound nearly matches what would be required to estimate density by independently sampling grid locations. From a biological perspective, our work helps shed light on how ants and other social insects can obtain relatively accurate density estimates via encounter rates. From a technical perspective, our analysis provides new tools for understanding complex dependencies in the collision probabilities of multiple random walks. We bound the strength of these dependencies using localmixingproperties of the underlying graph. Our results extend beyond the grid to more general graphs and we discuss applications to size estimation for social networks and density estimation for robot swarms.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1603.02981




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