The shape and dynamics of local attraction
Authored by D Stroembom, M Siljestam, J Park, D J T Sumpter
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1140/epjst/e2015-50082-8
Sponsors:
European Research Council (ERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Moving animal groups, such as flocks of birds or schools of fish, exhibit a varity of self-organized complex dynamical behaviors and
shapes. This kind of flocking behavior has been studied using
self-propelled particle models, in which the ``particles{''} interact
with their nearest neighbors through repulsion, attraction and alignment
responses. In particular, it has been shown that models based on
attraction alone can generate a range of dynamic groups in 2D, with
periodic boundary conditions, and in the absence of repulsion. Here we
investigate the effects of changing these conditions on the type of
groups observed in the model. We show that replacing the periodic
boundary conditions with a weak global attaction term in 2D, and
extending the model to 3D does not significantly change the type of
groups observed. We also provide a description of how attraction
strength and blind angle determine the groups generated in the 3D
version of the model. Finally, we show that adding repulsion do change
the type of groups oberved, making them appear and behave more like real
moving animal groups. Our results suggest that many biological instances
of collective motion may be explained without assuming that animals
explicitly align with each other. Instead, complex collective motion is
explained by the interplay of attraction and repulsion forces.
Tags
Individual-based model
emergence
Density
Rules
Fish schools
Motion
Collective animal behavior
Particles
Flocks
Empirical-data