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This book begins with a review of basic results in optimal search
for a stationary target. It then develops the theory of optimal
search for a moving target, providing algorithms for computing
optimal plans and examples of their use. Next it develops methods
for computing optimal search plans involving multiple targets and
multiple searchers with realistic operational constraints on search
movement. These results assume that the target does not react to
the search. In the final chapter there is a brief overview of
mostly military problems where the target tries to avoid being
found as well as rescue or rendezvous problems where the target and
the searcher cooperate. Larry Stone wrote his definitive book
Theory of Optimal Search in 1975, dealing almost exclusively with
the stationary target search problem. Since then the theory has
advanced to encompass search for targets that move even as the
search proceeds, and computers have developed sufficient capability
to employ the improved theory. In this book, Stone joins Royset and
Washburn to document and explain this expanded theory of search.
The problem of how to search for moving targets arises every day in
military, rescue, law enforcement, and border patrol operations.
This book begins with a review of basic results in optimal search
for a stationary target. It then develops the theory of optimal
search for a moving target, providing algorithms for computing
optimal plans and examples of their use. Next it develops methods
for computing optimal search plans involving multiple targets and
multiple searchers with realistic operational constraints on search
movement. These results assume that the target does not react to
the search. In the final chapter there is a brief overview of
mostly military problems where the target tries to avoid being
found as well as rescue or rendezvous problems where the target and
the searcher cooperate. Larry Stone wrote his definitive book
Theory of Optimal Search in 1975, dealing almost exclusively with
the stationary target search problem. Since then the theory has
advanced to encompass search for targets that move even as the
search proceeds, and computers have developed sufficient capability
to employ the improved theory. In this book, Stone joins Royset and
Washburn to document and explain this expanded theory of search.
The problem of how to search for moving targets arises every day in
military, rescue, law enforcement, and border patrol operations.
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