5,136 research outputs found
The Effect of Integrating Travel Time
This contribution demonstrates the potential gain for the quality of results
in a simulation of pedestrians when estimated remaining travel time is
considered as a determining factor for the movement of simulated pedestrians.
This is done twice: once for a force-based model and once for a cellular
automata-based model. The results show that for the (degree of realism of)
simulation results it is more relevant if estimated remaining travel time is
considered or not than which modeling technique is chosen -- here force-based
vs. cellular automata -- which normally is considered to be the most basic
choice of modeling approach.Comment: preprint of Pedestrian and Evacuation 2012 conference (PED2012)
contributio
Computation Speed of the F.A.S.T. Model
The F.A.S.T. model for microscopic simulation of pedestrians was formulated
with the idea of parallelizability and small computation times in general in
mind, but so far it was never demonstrated, if it can in fact be implemented
efficiently for execution on a multi-core or multi-CPU system. In this
contribution results are given on computation times for the F.A.S.T. model on
an eight-core PC.Comment: Accepted as contribution to "Traffic and Granular Flow 2009"
proceedings. This is a slightly extended versio
Why Queerness is not enough
Moral error theorists often claim to be strongly anti‑metaphysical
in their moral scepticism and atheistic naturalists. This paper argues that pre‑
cisely this becomes a problem for them, when their metaethical and ontologi‑
cal commitments clash. I first outline how the known arguments against error
theory face a problematic, yet rarely considered trade‑off : either they are very
strong, then they are also very demanding in their assumptions or they are less
demanding in their assumptions but rather weak in their conclusions. In re‑
sponse to this challenge I then develop a new argument against error theory
that exploits an overlooked inconsistency in the error theorists’ standard line
of argumentation. I conclude that the implications of this inconsistency are less
of a problem for fictionalist error theorists, but will render any eliminativism
based on error theory circular
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