Comments on: Optimizing Traffic Flow http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1758 This is a supplemental blog for a course which will cover how the social, technological, and natural worlds are connected, and how the study of networks sheds light on these connections. Fri, 08 Mar 2013 14:24:52 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.3.3 By: Cornell Info 204 Digest » Blog Archive » Traffic, Vetos, and the Final Minutes of a Lecture http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1758#comment-1174 Cornell Info 204 Digest » Blog Archive » Traffic, Vetos, and the Final Minutes of a Lecture Fri, 23 Feb 2007 07:15:04 +0000 http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1758#comment-1174 [...] A number of recent posts have been looking at models of how agents interact on networks, sometimes strategically and sometimes more simply. proneax discusses research on designing solutions to traffic congestion, in the spirit of our discussion of the Braess Paradox. This topic was also the focus of Tim Roughgarden’s research when he was a Ph.D. student here with Eva Tardos. [...] […] A number of recent posts have been looking at models of how agents interact on networks, sometimes strategically and sometimes more simply. proneax discusses research on designing solutions to traffic congestion, in the spirit of our discussion of the Braess Paradox. This topic was also the focus of Tim Roughgarden’s research when he was a Ph.D. student here with Eva Tardos. […]

]]>
By: Article Feed » Optimizing Traffic Flow http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1758#comment-1173 Article Feed » Optimizing Traffic Flow Thu, 22 Feb 2007 15:32:14 +0000 http://nsdl.library.cornell.edu/websites/expertvoices/info2040/archives/1758#comment-1173 [...] Read More proneax [...] […] Read More proneax […]

]]>