It has recently been shown that the expected energy requirements of a control
action applied to a complex network scales exponentially with the number of
nodes that are targeted. While the exponential scaling law provides an adequate
prediction of the mean required energy, it has also been shown that the spread
of energy values for a particular number of targets is large. Here, we explore
more closely the effect distance between driver nodes and target nodes and the
magnitude of self-regulation has on the energy of the control action. We find
that the energy scaling law can be written to include information about the
distance between driver nodes and target nodes to more accurately predict
control energy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, for ISCAS 201