Speaker: Theodore Kolokolnikov(Dalhousie University)
Time: Dec 15, 2017, 09:00-10:00
Location: Conference Room 415, Wisdom Valley 3#
Abstract: We discuss several agent-based models which exhibit spatial aggregation. The first example is a simple stochastic model of bacterial aggregation which leads to a novel fourth-order nonlinear PDE in its continuum limit. This PDE admits soliton-type solutions corresponding to bacterial aggregation patterns, which we explicitly construct.
The second example models complex predator-swarm interactions. Here, each prey within a swarm is represented by a point particle, with near repulsion and far-field attraction, in addition to the repulsion from the predator. The resulting system of ODE's can be approximated by a nonlocal PDE whose analysis yields insight about whether swarming behaviour helpful in avoiding a predator.
In the last part we consider a variant of the Bouchaud-Mezard model for wealth distribution in a society which incorporates the interaction radius between the agents, to model the extent of globalization in a society. We show that this can lead to the emergence of hot-spots of wealth, which are persistent spatial concentrations of wealth.