@phdthesis{Herrler2007, author = {Herrler, Rainer}, title = {Agentenbasierte Simulation zur Ablaufoptimierung in Krankenh{\"a}usern und anderen verteilten, dynamischen Umgebungen}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-24483}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2007}, abstract = {Verteilte dynamische Systeme unter lokalen und globalen Gesichtspunkten zu optimieren ist eine schwierige Aufgabe. Zwar sind grunds{\"a}tzliche Auswirkungen einzelner Maßnahmen h{\"a}ufig bekannt, durch widerstrebende Ziele, Wechselwirkungen zwischen Prozessen und Nebenwirkungen von Maßnahmen ist ein analytisches Vorgehen bei der Optimierung nicht m{\"o}glich. Besonders schwierig wird es, wenn lokale Einheiten einerseits ihre Ziele und Autonomie behalten sollen, aber durch zentrale Vorgaben bzw. Anreize so gesteuert werden sollen, dass ein {\"u}bergeordnetes Ziel erreicht wird. Ein praktisches Beispiel dieses allgemeinen Optimierungsproblems findet sich im Gesundheitswesen. Das Management von modernen Kliniken ist stets mit dem Problem konfrontiert, die Qualit{\"a}t der Pflege zu gew{\"a}hrleisten und gleichzeitig kosteneffizient zu arbeiten. Hier gilt es unter gegeben Rahmenbedingungen und bei Respektierung der Autonomie der Funktionseinheiten, Optimierungsmaßnahmen zu finden und durchzuf{\"u}hren. Vorhandene Werkzeuge zur Simulation und Modellierung bieten f{\"u}r diese Aufgabe keine ausreichend guten Vorgehensmodelle und Modellierungsmechanismen. Die agentenbasierte Simulation erm{\"o}glicht die Abbildung solcher Systeme und die Durchf{\"u}hrung von Simulationsexperimenten zur Bewertung einzelner Maßnahmen. Es werden L{\"o}sungswege und Werkzeuge vorgestellt und evaluiert, die den Benutzer bei der Formalisierung des Wissens und der Modellierung solch komplexer Szenarien unterst{\"u}tzen und ein systematisches Vorgehen zur Optimierung erm{\"o}glichen.}, subject = {Simulation}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Hossfeld2009, author = {Hoßfeld, Tobias}, title = {Performance Evaluation of Future Internet Applications and Emerging User Behavior}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-3067}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-37570}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {In future telecommunication systems, we observe an increasing diversity of access networks. The separation of transport services and applications or services leads to multi-network services, i.e., a future service has to work transparently to the underlying network infrastructure. Multi-network services with edge-based intelligence, like P2P file sharing or the Skype VoIP service, impose new traffic control paradigms on the future Internet. Such services adapt the amount of consumed bandwidth to reach different goals. A selfish behavior tries to keep the QoE of a single user above a certain level. Skype, for instance, repeats voice samples depending on the perceived end-to-end loss. From the viewpoint of a single user, the replication of voice data overcomes the degradation caused by packet loss and enables to maintain a certain QoE. The cost for this achievement is a higher amount of consumed bandwidth. However, if the packet loss is caused by congestion in the network, this additionally required bandwidth even worsens the network situation. Altruistic behavior, on the other side, would reduce the bandwidth consumption in such a way that the pressure on the network is released and thus the overall network performance is improved. In this monograph, we analyzed the impact of the overlay, P2P, and QoE paradigms in future Internet applications and the interactions from the observing user behavior. The shift of intelligence toward the edge is accompanied by a change in the emerging user behavior and traffic profile, as well as a change from multi-service networks to multi-networks services. In addition, edge-based intelligence may lead to a higher dynamics in the network topology, since the applications are often controlled by an overlay network, which can rapidly change in size and structure as new nodes can leave or join the overlay network in an entirely distributed manner. As a result, we found that the performance evaluation of such services provides new challenges, since novel key performance factors have to be first identified, like pollution of P2P systems, and appropriate models of the emerging user behavior are required, e.g. taking into account user impatience. As common denominator of the presented studies in this work, we focus on a user-centric view when evaluating the performance of future Internet applications. For a subscriber of a certain application or service, the perceived quality expressed as QoE will be the major criterion of the user's satisfaction with the network and service providers. We selected three different case studies and characterized the application's performance from the end user's point of view. Those are (1) cooperation in mobile P2P file sharing networks, (2) modeling of online TV recording services, and (3) QoE of edge-based VoIP applications. The user-centric approach facilitates the development of new mechanisms to overcome problems arising from the changing user behavior. An example is the proposed CycPriM cooperation strategy, which copes with selfish user behavior in mobile P2P file sharing system. An adequate mechanism has also been shown to be efficient in a heterogeneous B3G network with mobile users conducting vertical handovers between different wireless access technologies. The consideration of the user behavior and the user perceived quality guides to an appropriate modeling of future Internet applications. In the case of the online TV recording service, this enables the comparison between different technical realizations of the system, e.g. using server clusters or P2P technology, to properly dimension the installed network elements and to assess the costs for service providers. Technologies like P2P help to overcome phenomena like flash crowds and improve scalability compared to server clusters, which may get overloaded in such situations. Nevertheless, P2P technology invokes additional challenges and different user behavior to that seen in traditional client/server systems. Beside the willingness to share files and the churn of users, peers may be malicious and offer fake contents to disturb the data dissemination. Finally, the understanding and the quantification of QoE with respect to QoS degradations permits designing sophisticated edge-based applications. To this end, we identified and formulated the IQX hypothesis as an exponential interdependency between QoE and QoS parameters, which we validated for different examples. The appropriate modeling of the emerging user behavior taking into account the user's perceived quality and its interactions with the overlay and P2P paradigm will finally help to design future Internet applications.}, subject = {Leistungsbewertung}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Hartmann2015, author = {Hartmann, Matthias}, title = {Optimization and Design of Network Architectures for Future Internet Routing}, issn = {1432-8801}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-11416}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-114165}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {At the center of the Internet's protocol stack stands the Internet Protocol (IP) as a common denominator that enables all communication. To make routing efficient, resilient, and scalable, several aspects must be considered. Care must be taken that traffic is well balanced to make efficient use of the existing network resources, both in failure free operation and in failure scenarios. Finding the optimal routing in a network is an NP-complete problem. Therefore, routing optimization is usually performed using heuristics. This dissertation shows that a routing optimized with one objective function is often not good when looking at other objective functions. It can even be worse than unoptimized routing with respect to that objective function. After looking at failure-free routing and traffic distribution in different failure scenarios, the analysis is extended to include the loop-free alternate (LFA) IP fast reroute mechanism. Different application scenarios of LFAs are examined and a special focus is set on the fact that LFAs usually cannot protect all traffic in a network even against single link failures. Thus, the routing optimization for LFAs is targeted on both link utilization and failure coverage. Finally, the pre-congestion notification mechanism PCN for network admission control and overload protection is analyzed and optimized. Different design options for implementing the protocol are compared, before algorithms are developed for the calculation and optimization of protocol parameters and PCN-based routing. The second part of the thesis tackles a routing problem that can only be resolved on a global scale. The scalability of the Internet is at risk since a major and intensifying growth of the interdomain routing tables has been observed. Several protocols and architectures are analyzed that can be used to make interdomain routing more scalable. The most promising approach is the locator/identifier (Loc/ID) split architecture which separates routing from host identification. This way, changes in connectivity, mobility of end hosts, or traffic-engineering activities are hidden from the routing in the core of the Internet and the routing tables can be kept much smaller. All of the currently proposed Loc/ID split approaches have their downsides. In particular, the fact that most architectures use the ID for routing outside the Internet's core is a poor design, which inhibits many of the possible features of a new routing architecture. To better understand the problems and to provide a solution for a scalable routing design that implements a true Loc/ID split, the new GLI-Split protocol is developed in this thesis, which provides separation of global and local routing and uses an ID that is independent from any routing decisions. Besides GLI-Split, several other new routing architectures implementing Loc/ID split have been proposed for the Internet. Most of them assume that a mapping system is queried for EID-to-RLOC mappings by an intermediate node at the border of an edge network. When the mapping system is queried by an intermediate node, packets are already on their way towards their destination, and therefore, the mapping system must be fast, scalable, secure, resilient, and should be able to relay packets without locators to nodes that can forward them to the correct destination. The dissertation develops a classification for all proposed mapping system architectures and shows their similarities and differences. Finally, the fast two-level mapping system FIRMS is developed. It includes security and resilience features as well as a relay service for initial packets of a flow when intermediate nodes encounter a cache miss for the EID-to-RLOC mapping.}, subject = {Netzwerk}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Herrmann2013, author = {Herrmann, Christian}, title = {Robotic Motion Compensation for Applications in Radiation Oncology}, isbn = {978-3-923959-88-4}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-6727}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-79045}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Aufgrund vieler Verbesserungen der Behandlungsmethoden im Laufe der letzten 60 Jahre, erlaubt die Strahlentherapie heutzutage pr{\"a}zise Behandlungen von statischen Tumoren. Jedoch birgt die Bestrahlung von sich bewegenden Tumoren noch große Herausforderungen in sich, da bewegliche Tumore oft den Behandlungsstrahl verlassen. Dabei reduziert sich die Strahlendosis im Tumor w{\"a}hrend sich diese im umliegenden gesunden Gewebe erh{\"o}ht. Diese Forschungsarbeit zielt darauf ab, die Grenzen der Strahlentherapie zu erweitern, um pr{\"a}zise Behandlungen von beweglichen Tumoren zu erm{\"o}glichen. Der Fokus der Arbeit liegt auf der Erstellung eines Echtzeitsystems zur aktiven Kompensation von Tumorbewegungen durch robotergest{\"u}tzte Methoden. W{\"a}hrend Behandlungen befinden sich Patienten auf einer Patientenliege, mit der statische Lagerungsfehler vor Beginn einer Behandlung korrigiert werden. Die in dieser Arbeit verwendete Patientenliege "HexaPOD" ist ein paralleler Manipulator mit sechs Freiheitsgraden, der große Lasten innerhalb eines eingeschr{\"a}nkten Arbeitsbereichs pr{\"a}zise positionieren kann. Obwohl der HexaPOD urspr{\"u}nglich nicht f{\"u}r dynamische Anwendungen konzipiert wurde, wird dieser f{\"u}r eine dauerhafte Bewegungskompensation eingesetzt, in dem Patienten so bewegt werden, dass Tumore pr{\"a}zise im Zentralstrahl w{\"a}hrend der Dauer einer gesamten Behandlung verbleiben. Um ein echtzeitf{\"a}higes Kompensationssystem auf Basis des HexaPODs zu realisieren, muss eine Reihe an Herausforderungen bew{\"a}ltigt werden. Echtzeitaspekte werden einerseits durch die Verwendung eines harten Echtzeitbetriebssystems abgedeckt, andererseits durch die Messung und Sch{\"a}tzung von Latenzzeiten aller physikalischen Gr{\"o}ßen im System, z.B. Messungen der Tumor- und Atemposition. Neben der konsistenten und durchg{\"a}ngigen Ber{\"u}cksichtigung von akkuraten Zeitinformation, werden alle software-induzierten Latenzen adaptiv ausgeglichen. Dies erfordert Vorhersagen der Tumorposition in die nahe Zukunft. Zahlreiche Pr{\"a}diktoren zur Atem- und Tumorpositionsvorhersage werden vorgeschlagen und anhand verschiedenster Metriken evaluiert. Erweiterungen der Pr{\"a}diktionsalgorithmen werden eingef{\"u}hrt, die sowohl Atem- als auch Tumorpositionsinformationen fusionieren, um Vorhersagen ohne explizites Korrelationsmodell zu erm{\"o}glichen. Die Vorhersagen bestimmen den zuk{\"u}nftigen Bewegungspfad des HexaPODs, um Tumorbewegungen zu kompensieren. Dazu werden verschiedene Regler entwickelt, die eine Trajektorienverfolgung mit dem HexaPOD erm{\"o}glichen. Auf der Basis von linearer und nicht-linearer dynamischer Modellierung des HexaPODs mit Methoden der Systemidentifikation, wird zun{\"a}chst ein modellpr{\"a}diktiver Regler entwickelt. Ein zweiter Regler wird auf Basis einer Annahme {\"u}ber das Arbeitsprinzip des internen Reglers im HexaPOD entworfen. Schließlich wird ein dritter Regler vorgeschlagen, der beide vorhergehenden Regler miteinander kombiniert. F{\"u}r jeden dieser Regler werden vergleichende Ergebnisse aus Experimenten mit realer Hardware und menschlichen Versuchspersonen pr{\"a}sentiert und diskutiert. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus wird die geeignete Wahl von freien Parametern in den Reglern vorgestellt. Neben einer pr{\"a}zisen Verfolgung der Referenztrajektorie spielt der Patientenkomfort eine entscheidende Rolle f{\"u}r die Akzeptanz des Systems. Es wird gezeigt, dass die Regler glatte Trajektorien realisieren k{\"o}nnen, um zu garantieren, dass sich Patienten wohl f{\"u}hlen w{\"a}hrend ihre Tumorbewegung mit Genauigkeiten im Submillimeterbereich ausgeglichen wird. Gesamtfehler werden im Kompensationssystem analysiert, in dem diese zu Trajektorienverfolgungsfehlern und Pr{\"a}diktionsfehlern in Beziehung gesetzt werden. Durch Ausnutzung von Eigenschaften verschiedener Pr{\"a}diktoren wird gezeigt, dass die Startzeit des Systems bis die Verfolgung der Referenztrajektorie erreicht ist, wenige Sekunden betr{\"a}gt. Dies gilt insbesondere f{\"u}r den Fall eines initial ruhenden HexaPODs und ohne Vorwissen {\"u}ber Tumorbewegungen. Dies zeigt die Eignung des Systems f{\"u}r die sehr kurz fraktionierten Behandlungen von Lungentumoren. Das Tumorkompensationssystem wurde ausschließlich auf Basis von klinischer Standard-Hardware entwickelt, die in vielen Behandlungsr{\"a}umen zu finden ist. Durch ein einfaches und flexibles Design k{\"o}nnen Behandlungsr{\"a}ume in kosteneffizienter Weise um M{\"o}glichkeiten der Bewegungskompensation erg{\"a}nzt werden. Dar{\"u}ber hinaus werden aktuelle Behandlungsmethoden wie intensit{\"a}tsmodulierte Strahlentherapie oder Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy in keiner Weise eingeschr{\"a}nkt. Aufgrund der Unterst{\"u}tzung verschiedener Kompensationsmodi kann das System auf alle beweglichen Tumore angewendet werden, unabh{\"a}ngig davon ob die Bewegungen vorhersagbar (Lungentumore) oder nicht vorhersagbar (Prostatatumore) sind. Durch Integration von geeigneten Methoden zur Tumorpositionsbestimmung kann das System auf einfache Weise zur Kompensation von anderen Tumoren erweitert werden.}, subject = {Robotik}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reith2001, author = {Reith, Steffen}, title = {Generalized Satisfiability Problems}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-74}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {In the last 40 years, complexity theory has grown to a rich and powerful field in theoretical computer science. The main task of complexity theory is the classification of problems with respect to their consumption of resources (e.g., running time or required memory). To study the computational complexity (i.e., consumption of resources) of problems, similar problems are grouped into so called complexity classes. During the systematic study of numerous problems of practical relevance, no efficient algorithm for a great number of studied problems was found. Moreover, it was unclear whether such algorithms exist. A major breakthrough in this situation was the introduction of the complexity classes P and NP and the identification of hardest problems in NP. These hardest problems of NP are nowadays known as NP-complete problems. One prominent example of an NP-complete problem is the satisfiability problem of propositional formulas (SAT). Here we get a propositional formula as an input and it must be decided whether an assignment for the propositional variables exists, such that this assignment satisfies the given formula. The intensive study of NP led to numerous related classes, e.g., the classes of the polynomial-time hierarchy PH, P, \#P, PP, NL, L and \#L. During the study of these classes, problems related to propositional formulas were often identified to be complete problems for these classes. Hence some questions arise: Why is SAT so hard to solve? Are there modifications of SAT which are complete for other well-known complexity classes? In the context of these questions a result by E. Post is extremely useful. He identified and characterized all classes of Boolean functions being closed under superposition. It is possible to study problems which are connected to generalized propositional logic by using this result, which was done in this thesis. Hence, many different problems connected to propositional logic were studied and classified with respect to their computational complexity, clearing the borderline between easy and hard problems.}, subject = {Erf{\"u}llbarkeitsproblem}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kosub2001, author = {Kosub, Sven}, title = {Complexity and Partitions}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-2808}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {Computational complexity theory usually investigates the complexity of sets, i.e., the complexity of partitions into two parts. But often it is more appropriate to represent natural problems by partitions into more than two parts. A particularly interesting class of such problems consists of classification problems for relations. For instance, a binary relation R typically defines a partitioning of the set of all pairs (x,y) into four parts, classifiable according to the cases where R(x,y) and R(y,x) hold, only R(x,y) or only R(y,x) holds or even neither R(x,y) nor R(y,x) is true. By means of concrete classification problems such as Graph Embedding or Entailment (for propositional logic), this thesis systematically develops tools, in shape of the boolean hierarchy of NP-partitions and its refinements, for the qualitative analysis of the complexity of partitions generated by NP-relations. The Boolean hierarchy of NP-partitions is introduced as a generalization of the well-known and well-studied Boolean hierarchy (of sets) over NP. Whereas the latter hierarchy has a very simple structure, the situation is much more complicated for the case of partitions into at least three parts. To get an idea of this hierarchy, alternative descriptions of the partition classes are given in terms of finite, labeled lattices. Based on these characterizations the Embedding Conjecture is established providing the complete information on the structure of the hierarchy. This conjecture is supported by several results. A natural extension of the Boolean hierarchy of NP-partitions emerges from the lattice-characterization of its classes by considering partition classes generated by finite, labeled posets. It turns out that all significant ideas translate from the case of lattices. The induced refined Boolean hierarchy of NP-partitions enables us more accuratly capturing the complexity of certain relations (such as Graph Embedding) and a description of projectively closed partition classes.}, subject = {Partition }, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schmitz2000, author = {Schmitz, Heinz}, title = {The Forbidden Pattern Approach to Concatenation Hierarchies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-2832}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2000}, abstract = {The thesis looks at the question asking for the computability of the dot-depth of star-free regular languages. Here one has to determine for a given star-free regular language the minimal number of alternations between concatenation on one hand, and intersection, union, complement on the other hand. This question was first raised in 1971 (Brzozowski/Cohen) and besides the extended star-heights problem usually refered to as one of the most difficult open questions on regular languages. The dot-depth problem can be captured formally by hierarchies of classes of star-free regular languages B(0), B(1/2), B(1), B(3/2),... and L(0), L(1/2), L(1), L(3/2),.... which are defined via alternating the closure under concatenation and Boolean operations, beginning with single alphabet letters. Now the question of dot-depth is the question whether these hierarchy classes have decidable membership problems. The thesis makes progress on this question using the so-called forbidden pattern approach: Classes of regular languages are characterized in terms of patterns in finite automata (subgraphs in the transition graph) that are not allowed. Such a characterization immediately implies the decidability of the respective class, since the absence of a certain pattern in a given automaton can be effectively verified. Before this work, the decidability of B(0), B(1/2), B(1) and L(0), L(1/2), L(1), L(3/2) were known. Here a detailed study of these classes with help of forbidden patterns is given which leads to new insights into their inner structure. Furthermore, the decidability of B(3/2) is proven. Based on these results a theory of pattern iteration is developed which leads to the introduction of two new hierarchies of star-free regular languages. These hierarchies are decidable on one hand, on the other hand they are in close connection to the classes B(n) and L(n). It remains an open question here whether they may in fact coincide. Some evidence is given in favour of this conjecture which opens a new way to attack the dot-depth problem. Moreover, it is shown that the class L(5/2) is decidable in the restricted case of a two-letter alphabet.}, subject = {Sternfreie Sprache}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Wirth2001, author = {Wirth, Hans-Christoph}, title = {Multicriteria Approximation of Network Design and Network Upgrade Problems}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-2845}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {Network planning has come to great importance during the past decades. Today's telecommunication, traffic systems, and logistics would not have been evolved to the current state without careful analysis of the underlying network problems and precise implementation of the results obtained from those examinations. Graphs with node and arc attributes are a very useful tool to model realistic applications, while on the other hand they are well understood in theory. We investigate network design problems which are motivated particularly from applications in communication networks and logistics. Those problems include the search for homogeneous subgraphs in edge labeled graphs where either the total number of labels or the reload cost are subject to optimize. Further, we investigate some variants of the dial a ride problem. On the other hand, we use node and edge upgrade models to deal with the fact that in many cases one prefers to change existing networks rather than implementing a newly computed solution from scratch. We investigate the construction of bottleneck constrained forests under a node upgrade model, as well as several flow cost problems under a edge based upgrade model. All problems are examined within a framework of multi-criteria optimization. Many of the problems can be shown to be NP-hard, with the consequence that, under the widely accepted assumption that P is not equal to NP, there cannot exist efficient algorithms for solving the problems. This motivates the development of approximation algorithms which compute near-optimal solutions with provable performance guarantee in polynomial time.}, subject = {Netzplantechnik}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Glasser2001, author = {Glaßer, Christian}, title = {Forbidden-Patterns and Word Extensions for Concatenation Hierarchies}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-1179153}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {Starfree regular languages can be build up from alphabet letters by using only Boolean operations and concatenation. The complexity of these languages can be measured with the so-called dot-depth. This measure leads to concatenation hierarchies like the dot-depth hierarchy (DDH) and the closely related Straubing-Th{\´e}rien hierarchy (STH). The question whether the single levels of these hierarchies are decidable is still open and is known as the dot-depth problem. In this thesis we prove/reprove the decidability of some lower levels of both hierarchies. More precisely, we characterize these levels in terms of patterns in finite automata (subgraphs in the transition graph) that are not allowed. Therefore, such characterizations are called forbidden-pattern characterizations. The main results of the thesis are as follows: forbidden-pattern characterization for level 3/2 of the DDH (this implies the decidability of this level) decidability of the Boolean hierarchy over level 1/2 of the DDH definition of decidable hierarchies having close relations to the DDH and STH Moreover, we prove/reprove the decidability of the levels 1/2 and 3/2 of both hierarchies in terms of forbidden-pattern characterizations. We show the decidability of the Boolean hierarchies over level 1/2 of the DDH and over level 1/2 of the STH. A technique which uses word extensions plays the central role in the proofs of these results. With this technique it is possible to treat the levels 1/2 and 3/2 of both hierarchies in a uniform way. Furthermore, it can be used to prove the decidability of the mentioned Boolean hierarchies. Among other things we provide a combinatorial tool that allows to partition words of arbitrary length into factors of bounded length such that every second factor u leads to a loop with label u in a given finite automaton.}, subject = {Automatentheorie}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kluegl2000, author = {Kl{\"u}gl, Franziska}, title = {Aktivit{\"a}tsbasierte Verhaltensmodellierung und ihre Unterst{\"u}tzung bei Multiagentensimulationen}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-2874}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2000}, abstract = {Durch Zusammenf{\"u}hrung traditioneller Methoden zur individuenbasierten Simulation und dem Konzept der Multiagentensysteme steht mit der Multiagentensimulation eine Methodik zur Verf{\"u}gung, die es erm{\"o}glicht, sowohl technisch als auch konzeptionell eine neue Ebene an Detaillierung bei Modellbildung und Simulation zu erreichen. Ein Modell beruht dabei auf dem Konzept einer Gesellschaft: Es besteht aus einer Menge interagierender, aber in ihren Entscheidungen autonomen Einheiten, den Agenten. Diese {\"a}ndern durch ihre Aktionen ihre Umwelt und reagieren ebenso auf die f{\"u}r sie wahrnehmbaren {\"A}nderungen in der Umwelt. Durch die Simulation jedes Agenten zusammen mit der Umwelt, in der er "lebt", wird die Dynamik im Gesamtsystem beobachtbar. In der vorliegenden Dissertation wurde ein Repr{\"a}sentationsschema f{\"u}r Multiagentensimulationen entwickelt werden, das es Fachexperten, wie zum Beispiel Biologen, erm{\"o}glicht, selbst{\"a}ndig ohne traditionelles Programmieren Multiagentenmodelle zu implementieren und mit diesen Experimente durchzuf{\"u}hren. Dieses deklarative Schema beruht auf zwei Basiskonzepten: Der K{\"o}rper eines Agenten besteht aus Zustandsvariablen. Das Verhalten des Agenten kann mit Regeln beschrieben werden. Ausgehend davon werden verschiedene Strukturierungsans{\"a}tze behandelt. Das wichtigste Konzept ist das der "Aktivit{\"a}t", einer Art "Verhaltenszustand": W{\"a}hrend der Agent in einer Aktivit{\"a}t A verweilt, f{\"u}hrt er die zugeh{\"o}rigen Aktionen aus und dies solange, bis eine Regel feuert, die diese Aktivit{\"a}t beendet und eine neue Aktivit{\"a}t ausw{\"a}hlt. Durch Indizierung dieser Regeln bei den zugeh{\"o}rigen Aktivit{\"a}ten und Einf{\"u}hrung von abstrakten Aktivit{\"a}ten entsteht ein Schema f{\"u}r eine vielf{\"a}ltig strukturierbare Verhaltensbeschreibung. Zu diesem Schema wurde ein Interpreter entwickelt, der ein derartig repr{\"a}sentiertes Modell ausf{\"u}hrt und so Simulationsexperimente mit dem Multiagentenmodell erlaubt. Auf dieser Basis wurde die Modellierungs- und Experimentierumgebung SeSAm ("Shell f{\"u}r Simulierte Agentensysteme") entwickelt. Sie verwendet vorhandene Konzepte aus dem visuellen Programmieren. Mit dieser Umgebung wurden Anwendungsmodelle aus verschiedenen Dom{\"a}nen realisiert: Neben abstrakten Spielbeispielen waren dies vor allem Fragestellungen zu sozialen Insekten, z.B. zum Verhalten von Ameisen, Bienen oder der Interaktion zwischen Bienenv{\"o}lkern und Milbenpopulationen.}, subject = {Agent }, language = {de} }