Abstract

Resource allocation takes place in various types of real-world complex systems such as urban traffic, social services institutions, economical and ecosystems. Mathematically, the dynamical process of resource allocation can be modeled as minority games. Spontaneous evolution of the resource allocation dynamics, however, often leads to a harmful herding behavior accompanied by strong fluctuations in which a large majority of agents crowd temporarily for a few resources, leaving many others unused. Developing effective control methods to suppress and eliminate herding is an important but open problem. Here we develop a pinning control method, that the fluctuations of the system consist of intrinsic and systematic components allows us to design a control scheme with separated control variables. A striking finding is the universal existence of an optimal pinning fraction to minimize the variance of the system, regardless of the pinning patterns and the network topology. We carry out a generally applicable theory to explain the emergence of optimal pinning and to predict the dependence of the optimal pinning fraction on the network topology. Our work represents a general framework to deal with the broader problem of controlling collective dynamics in complex systems with potential applications in social, economical and political systems.

Highlights

  • Resource allocation takes place in various types of real-world complex systems such as urban traffic, social services institutions, economical and ecosystems

  • Spontaneous evolution of the resource allocation dynamics, often leads to a harmful herding behavior accompanied by strong fluctuations in which a large majority of agents crowd temporarily for a few resources, leaving many others unused

  • Our work represents a general framework to deal with the broader problem of controlling collective dynamics in complex systems with potential applications in social, economical and political systems

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Summary

OPEN Controlling herding in minority game systems

Ji-Qiang Zhang[1], Zi-Gang Huang[1,2], Zhi-Xi Wu1, Riqi Su2 & Ying-Cheng Lai[2,3] received: 20 October 2015 accepted: 13 January 2016 Published: 17 February 2016. Our work represents a general framework to deal with the broader problem of controlling collective dynamics in complex systems with potential applications in social, economical and political systems. A universal paradigm to model and understand the interactions and dynamical evolutions in many real world systems is complex adaptive systems[17,18,19], among which minority game (MG)[20,21] stands out as a pertinent framework for resource allocation. We develop a theoretical analysis based on the mean-field approximation to understand the non-monotonic behavior of the system efficiency about the optimal pinning fraction. Our work represents a general framework to optimally control the collective dynamics in complex MG systems with potential applications in social, economical and political systems

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