Interaction ruling animal collective behavior depends on topological rather than metric distance: Evidence from a field study
Istituto Superiore di Sanità · Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Numerical models indicate that collective animal behavior may emerge from simple local rules of interaction among the individuals. However, very little is known about the nature of such interaction, so that models and theories mostly rely on aprioristic assumptions. By reconstructing the three-dimensional positions of individual birds in airborne flocks of a few thousand members, we show that the interaction does not depend on the metric distance, as most current models and theories assume, but rather on the topological distance. In fact, we discovered that each bird interacts on average with a fixed number of neighbors (six to seven), rather than with all neighbors within a fixed metric distance. We argue…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 133.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
12- MBMichele BalleriniCorresponding
Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia
- NCN. Cabibbo
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
- RCRaphaël Candelier
- ACAndrea Cavagna
Institute for Complex Systems, Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia
- ECE. Cisbani
Istituto Superiore di Sanità
Topics & keywords
- Metric (unit)
- Cohesion (chemistry)
- Topology (electrical circuits)
- Collective behavior
- Flocking (texture)
- Flock
- Metric space
- Mathematics