This study investigates the consensus problem for cooperative heterogeneous agents with non-linear dynamics in a directed communication network. Global bounded consensus is studied by employing a quadratic Lyapunov function, and a distributed consensus protocol is designed by solving a few lower-dimension linear matrix inequalities associated with the dynamics of the heterogeneous agents. A sufficient condition corresponding to the semi-positive definiteness of the Laplacian matrix and the non-linear dynamics of each agent is obtained to guarantee the boundedness of consensus. In particular, to avoid the calculation of matrix eigenvalues, a sufficient condition is also obtained in the form of several scalar inequalities involving the coupling strengths and the property of all paths between agent pairs under a proper path strategy. The presented framework for designing protocols is quite simple with limited conservatism, which can be effectively used to design consensus protocols of various weighted and directed networks.
Wikis have proved to be very effective collaboration and knowledge management tools in large variety of fields thanks to their simplicity and flexible nature. Another important development for the internet is the emergence of powerful mobile devices supported by fast and reliable wireless networks. The combination of these developments begs the question of how to extend wikis on mobile devices and how to leverage mobile devices' rich modalities to supplement current wikis. Realizing that composing and consuming through auditory channel is the most natural and efficient way for mobile device user, this paper explores the use of audio as the medium of wiki. Our work, as the first step towards this direction, creates a framework called Mobile Audio Wiki which facilitates asynchronous audiomediated collaboration on the move. In this paper, we present the design of Mobile Audio Wiki. As a part of such design, we propose an innovative approach for a light-weight audio content annotation system for enabling group editing, versioning and cross-linking among audio clips. To elucidate the novel collaboration model introduced by Mobile Audio Wiki, its four usage modes are identified and presented in storyboard format. Finally, we describe the initial design for presentation and navigation of Mobile Audio Wiki.
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