Group Evacuation on a Line by Agents with Different Communication Abilities
Jurek Czyzowicz, Ryan Killick, Evangelos Kranakis, Danny Krizanc, Lata, Narayanan, Jaroslav Opatrny, Denis Pankratov, Sunil Shende

TL;DR
This paper studies how groups of autonomous agents with different wireless communication abilities can efficiently evacuate from an unknown point on an infinite line, proposing algorithms and analyzing their effectiveness.
Contribution
It introduces evacuation algorithms for mixed communication models and determines the optimal and bounds for competitive ratios based on agent communication capabilities.
Findings
Optimal evacuation algorithm with CR=3+2√2 for two agents of different types.
CR bounds [2+√5, 5] for groups with one sender or fully wireless agent and multiple receivers.
CR bounds [3, 5.681319] for groups with multiple senders and a single receiver or fully wireless agent.
Abstract
We consider evacuation of a group of autonomous mobile agents (or robots) from an unknown exit on an infinite line. The agents are initially placed at the origin of the line and can move with any speed up to the maximum speed in any direction they wish and they all can communicate when they are co-located. However, the agents have different wireless communication abilities: while some are fully wireless and can send and receive messages at any distance, a subset of the agents are senders, they can only transmit messages wirelessly, and the rest are receivers, they can only receive messages wirelessly. The agents start at the same time and their communication abilities are known to each other from the start. Starting at the origin of the line, the goal of the agents is to collectively find a target/exit at an unknown location on the line while minimizing the evacuation…
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