This accessible book provides an introduction to the analysis and design
of dynamic multiagent networks. Such networks are of great interest in a
wide range of areas in science and engineering, including: mobile sensor
networks, distributed robotics such as formation flying and swarming,
quantum networks, networked economics, biological synchronization, and
social networks. Focusing on graph theoretic methods for the analysis
and synthesis of dynamic multiagent networks, the book presents a
powerful new formalism and set of tools for networked systems.
The book's three sections look at foundations, multiagent networks, and
networks as systems. The authors give an overview of important ideas
from graph theory, followed by a detailed account of the agreement
protocol and its various extensions, including the behavior of the
protocol over undirected, directed, switching, and random networks. They
cover topics such as formation control, coverage, distributed
estimation, social networks, and games over networks. And they explore
intriguing aspects of viewing networks as systems, by making these
networks amenable to control-theoretic analysis and automatic synthesis,
by monitoring their dynamic evolution, and by examining higher-order
interaction models in terms of simplicial complexes and their
applications.
The book will interest graduate students working in systems and control,
as well as in computer science and robotics. It will be a standard
reference for researchers seeking a self-contained account of
system-theoretic aspects of multiagent networks and their wide-ranging
applications.
This book has been adopted as a textbook at the following
universities:
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- University of Stuttgart, Germany
- Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
- Johannes Kepler University, Austria
- Georgia Tech, USA
- University of Washington, USA
- Ohio University, USA