Abstract

A method for low-distortion (low-dissipation, low-dispersion) information propagation in swarm-type networks with suppression of high-frequency noise is presented. Information propagation in current neighbor-based networks, where each agent seeks to achieve a consensus with its neighbors, is diffusion-like, dissipative, and dispersive and does not reflect the wave-like (superfluidic) behavior seen in nature. However, pure wave-like neighbor-based networks have two challenges: i) It requires additional communication for sharing information about time derivatives and ii) it can lead to information decoherence through noise at high frequencies. The main contribution of this work is to show that delayed self-reinforcement (DSR) by the agents using prior information (e.g., using short-term memory) can lead to the wave-like information propagation at low-frequencies as seen in nature without the need for additional information sharing between the agents. Moreover, it is shown that the DSR can be designed to enable suppression of high-frequency noise transmission while limiting the dissipation and dispersion of (lower-frequency) information content leading to similar (cohesive) behavior of agents. In addition to explaining noise-suppressed wave-like information transfer in natural systems, the result impacts the design of noise-suppressing cohesive algorithms for engineered networks.

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