BioLogistics and the Struggle for Efficiency: Concepts and Perspectives
Dirk Helbing, Andreas Deutsch, Stefan Diez, Karsten Peters, Yannis, Kalaidzidis, Kathrin Padberg, Stefan Lammer, Anders Johansson, Georg Breier,, Frank Schulze, and Marino Zerial

TL;DR
This paper explores bio-inspired principles to enhance the efficiency, flexibility, and robustness of logistic systems by drawing lessons from biological systems and applying them to engineered logistics.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of BioLogistics, applying biological principles like modularity and self-organization to develop adaptive, resilient logistic systems.
Findings
BioLogistics offers a framework for flexible logistic system design.
Biological principles can improve robustness against supply-demand fluctuations.
Logistic models can reveal biological system organization.
Abstract
The growth of world population, limitation of resources, economic problems and environmental issues force engineers to develop increasingly efficient solutions for logistic systems. Pure optimization for efficiency, however, has often led to technical solutions that are vulnerable to variations in supply and demand, and to perturbations. In contrast, nature already provides a large variety of efficient, flexible and robust logistic solutions. Can we utilize biological principles to design systems, which can flexibly adapt to hardly predictable, fluctuating conditions? We propose a bio-inspired "BioLogistics" approach to deduce dynamic organization processes and principles of adaptive self-control from biological systems, and to transfer them to man-made logistics (including nanologistics), using principles of modularity, self-assembly, self-organization, and decentralized coordination.…
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