Modelling group navigation: transitive social structures improve navigational performance
Authored by Andrea Flack, Dora Biro, Tim Guilford, Robin Freeman
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2015.0213
Sponsors:
Microsoft Research Cambridge
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Collective navigation demands that group members reach consensus on
which path to follow, a task that might become more challenging when the
group's members have different social connections. Group decision-making
mechanisms have been studied successfully in the past using
individual-based modelling, although many of these studies have
neglected the role of social connections between the group's interacting
members. Nevertheless, empirical studies have demonstrated that
individual recognition, previous shared experiences and inter-individual
familiarity can influence the cohesion and the dynamics of the group as
well as the relative spatial positions of specific individuals within
it. Here, we use models of collective motion to study the impact of
social relationships on group navigation by introducing social network
structures into a model of collective motion. Our results show that
groups consisting of equally informed individuals achieve the highest
level of accuracy when they are hierarchically organized with the
minimum number of preferred connections per individual. We also observe
that the navigational accuracy of a group will depend strongly on
detailed aspects of its social organization. More specifically, group
navigation does not only depend on the underlying social relationships, but also on how much weight leading individuals put on following others.
Also, we show that groups with certain social structures can compensate
better for an increased level of navigational error. The results have
broader implications for studies on collective navigation and motion
because they show that only by considering a group's social system can
we fully elucidate the dynamics and advantages of joint movements.
Tags
Evolution
behavior
networks
Leadership
collective motion
Decision-Making
dominance
Animal groups
Pigeons
Formation flight