From d53299c87c62cf95cc27dc53b7eab086b23b2d4d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michal Charemza Date: Mon, 16 Dec 2024 08:52:15 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] docs: clearer figure caption --- paper/paper.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/paper/paper.md b/paper/paper.md index cb4e69a..4ecd126 100644 --- a/paper/paper.md +++ b/paper/paper.md @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ There are no other open source frameworks that take a simulation game created fo Through a single Python function call, OpenTTDLab runs OpenTTD over a range of configurations, such as a range of random seeds and a range of parameters of an AI. It then returns data from every month of in-game time, which can be processed and visualised. \autoref{fig:example-results} shows example results: comparing how the distributions of money in the bank change over time for two configurations of a simple AI. The differences in the distributions show that OpenTTDLab can be used to investigate risk-benefit trades-offs in supply chains. -![How the distribution of money in the bank changes over in-game time for ParameterisedAI, an AI programmed to construct a single bus route with a configurable number of buses [@charemza2024parameterised]. The results of 100 runs of OpenTTD are shown: 50 runs with 1 bus, and 50 runs with 16 buses. Adapted from @charemza2024reusable [chap. 5], © 2024 Michal Charemza.\label{fig:example-results}](example-results-charemza2004reproducible.pdf){height="150pt"} +![Example results generated using OpenTTDLab. The results show how the distribution of money in the bank changes over in-game time for ParameterisedAI, an AI programmed to construct a single bus route with a configurable number of buses [@charemza2024parameterised]. A total of 100 OpenTTD simulations were run: 50 with 1 bus, and 50 with 16 buses. Adapted from @charemza2024reusable [chap. 5], © 2024 Michal Charemza.\label{fig:example-results}](example-results-charemza2004reproducible.pdf){height="150pt"} # Acknowledgments