Long Dang

University of Massachusetts Lowell

Papers

1

Total Citations

2

H-Index

1

About

Long Dang is a researcher whose work lies at the intersection of multi-agent systems and network dynamics, with a particular focus on the mathematical modeling of interconnected agents. His most cited paper, "On interconnected multi-agent dynamical systems with non-uniform heterogeneous coupling link weights" (2008), addresses a critical challenge in distributed control: how to ensure stability and consensus when agents are connected through links of varying strengths. This foundational contribution has implications for fields ranging from robotics and sensor networks to infrastructure resilience. While his citation count is modest, Dang’s work is notable for its early recognition of the complexity introduced by heterogeneous coupling—a problem that has since become central to modern network theory. His research reflects a deep engagement with the real-world constraints of multi-agent coordination, particularly in high-stakes environments like counterterrorism and emergency response, where timely, decentralized decision-making is paramount. Dang’s contributions offer a rigorous mathematical lens for understanding how diverse systems can function cohesively under pressure.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

1
H-Index
1
Papers
2
Total Citations
2
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
On interconnected multi-agent dynamical systems with non-uniform heterogeneous coupling link weights
2 citations · 2008
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2008 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 2
🏛 Institutions: University of Massachusetts Lowell

Top Papers

  1. 1

Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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