Emergent Behaviour
Emergent Behaviour
Dr James Stovold
Two new Assistant Professor positions available at Lancaster University Leipzig, one with a focus on data science, one focussed on cyber security. Lancaster University Leipzig is a young branch campus of Lancaster University, based in Leipzig Germany. The department is focussed on intelligent systems, including topics such as emergent behaviour, unconventional computing, quantum software engineering, and robotics. These are grade 8 openings, so we would expect to see a research plan and teaching experience from interested applicants (grade 7 is the typical entry-level asst. prof. level).
Swarms for people
As tiny robots become individually more sophisticated, and larger robots easier to mass produce, a breakdown of conventional disciplinary silos is enabling swarm engineering to be adopted across scales and applications, from nanomedicine to treat cancer, to cm-sized robots for large-scale environmental monitoring or intralogistics. This convergence of capabilities is facilitating the transfer of lessons learned from one scale to the other. Cm-sized robots that work in the 1000s may operate in a way similar to reaction-diffusion systems at the nanoscale, while sophisticated microrobots may have individual capabilities that allow them to achieve swarm behaviour reminiscent of larger robots with memory, computation, and communication. Although the physics of these systems are fundamentally different, much of their emergent swarm behaviours can be abstracted to their ability to move and react to their local environment. This presents an opportunity to build a unified framework for the engineering of swarms across scales that makes use of machine learning to automatically discover suitable agent designs and behaviours, digital twins to seamlessly move between the digital and physical world, and user studies to explore how to make swarms safe and trustworthy. Such a framework would push the envelope of swarm capabilities, towards making swarms for people.