The principles of collective animal behaviour
Oxford Research Group · University of Oxford
Abstract
In recent years, the concept of self-organization has been used to understand collective behaviour of animals. The central tenet of self-organization is that simple repeated interactions between individuals can produce complex adaptive patterns at the level of the group. Inspiration comes from patterns seen in physical systems, such as spiralling chemical waves, which arise without complexity at the level of the individual units of which the system is composed. The suggestion is that biological structures such as termite mounds, ant trail networks and even human crowds can be explained in terms of repeated interactions between the animals and their environment, without invoking individual complexity. Here, I…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 135
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Collective behavior
- Simple (philosophy)
- Foraging
- Crowds
- Self-organization
- Dance
- Cognitive science
- Collective intelligence