collective decision making: synchronous movement of individuals in groups

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Emily McHenry Biology 478 April 25, 2012 COLLECTIVE DECISION MAKING: SYNCHRONOUS MOVEMENT OF INDIVIDUALS IN GROUPS

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Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups. Emily McHenry Biology 478 April 25, 2012. What Is Collective Behavior?. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ua2quxUDyRk&feature=related. (Start at 3:37). What Is Collective Behavior?. Collective animal behavior : - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Emily McHenry

Biology 478

April 25, 2012

COLLECTIVE DECISION MAKING:

SYNCHRONOUS MOVEMENT OF

INDIVIDUALS IN GROUPS

Page 2: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

WHAT IS COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ua2quxUDyRk&feature=related

(Start at 3:37)

Page 3: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Collective animal behavior:

the coordinated behavior of large groups of similar animals and the emergent properties of these groups (Couzin 2012).

WHAT IS COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR?

worldhum.com

Page 4: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Flocks of birds

Swarms of insects

Schools of fish

Herds of mammals

EXAMPLES OF COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR

aquariumprosmn.com

esa.orgdigital-photography-school.com

Page 5: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Increased foraging efficiency (Bazazi 2012)Energy efficiency (Tamm 1980)

Aerodynamic and hydrodynamic benefitsPredation avoidance

Relies on selfish herd effect; increased group size results in lower chances of any one individual becoming a victim

WHY DO ANIMALS MOVE SYNCHRONOUSLY?

Page 6: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

There are 3 Distinct patterns of predation avoidance

Vacuolization: where expansion results in a cavity

forming around the predator

Flash expansion: where individuals rapidly move away from the predator as it

strikes

Split effect where the group fragments

Most common reason for aggregations, but not always beneficial! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzZhSl_00pI&feature=related

PREDATION AVOIDANCE

Page 7: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Most research has

been done in two ways:1. Filming groups and then

frame-by-frame analyzing

2. Swarm simulating software

STUDYING COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR

princeton.edu

Page 8: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

SWARM SIMULATIONS

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUkjC-69vaw

Swarms are created following 3

fundamental rules: Separation: steer to avoid crowding or

collisions

Alignment: steer toward the average

heading of groupmates

Cohesion: steer to move toward the average

position of local groupmates

Page 9: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Previously thought to be telepathicUtilizing senses

Eyesight, pressure, hearing, etc.Monitoring position of neighbors

Behavioral zones Repulsion Attraction Alignment based on relative position

HOW DO ANIMALS MOVE SYNCHRONOUSLY?

Page 10: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Flocking Birds/Schooling Fish Democracy

Quorum responses (Sumpter 2009)

Insects No leader, forced march (Simpson 2006)

Mammals Unknown

DECISION MAKING IN THE GROUP

Page 11: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

QUESTIONS?

Page 12: Collective Decision Making: Synchronous movement Of individuals in groups

Potts, Wayne K. 1984. "The chorus-line hypothesis of coordination in avian flocks." Nature 24: 344-345. Simpson, Stephen J, Gregory A. Sword, Patrick D. Lorch, and Iain D. Couzin. "Cannibal Crickets on a Forced March for

Protein and Salt." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 103.11 (2006): 4152-4156.

Bazazi, S. et al. (2012) Vortex formation and foraging in polyphonic spadefoot toad tadpoles. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. March 2012.

Tamm, Staffan. "Bird Orientation: Single Homing Pigeons Compared with Small Flocks." Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology . 7.4 (1980): 319-322.

Tien, J Rubenstein, D. “Dynamics of fish shoals: Identifying key decision rules.” Evolutionary Ecology Research, No. 6. (2004), pp. 555-565

Ward, A.J.W, D.J.T Sumpter, I.D Couzin, P.J.B Hart, and J Krause. "Quorum Decision-Making Facilitates Information Transfer in Fish Shoals." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America . 105.19 (2008): 6948-6953.

Sumpter, D.J.T, and S.C Pratt. "Quorum Responses and Consensus Decision Making." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences . 364.1518 (2009): 743-753.

Couzin, I D, and J Krause. "Self-organization and Collective Behavior in Vertebrates." Advances in the Study of Behavior. 32 (2003): 1-75.

Couzin, I. D., J. Krause, R. James, G. D. Ruxton, and N. R. Franks. 2002. Collective memory and spatial sorting in animal groups. Journal of Theoretical Biology 218: 1-11.

Caraco, T., S. Martindale, and H. R. Pulliam. 1980. Flocking: advantages and disadvantages. Nature 285: 400-401.

WORKS CITED