A spatially explicit Bayesian framework for cognitive schooling behaviours
Authored by Daniel Gruenbaum
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2012.0027
Sponsors:
United States Office of Naval Research (ONR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Social aggregations such as schools, swarms, flocks and herds occur
across a broad diversity of animal species, strongly impacting
ecological and evolutionary dynamics of these species and their
predators, prey and competitors. The mechanisms through which
individual-level responses to neighbours generate group-level
characteristics have been extensively investigated both experimentally
and using mathematical models. Models of social groups typically adopt a
`zone' approach, in which individuals' movement responses to neighbours
are functions of instantaneous relative position. Empirical studies have
demonstrated that most social animals such as fish exhibit
well-developed spatial memory and other advanced cognitive capabilities.
However, most models of social grouping do not explicitly include
spatial memory, largely because a tractable framework for modelling
acquisition of and response to historical spatial information has been
lacking. Using fish schooling as a focal example, this study presents a
framework for including cognitive responses to spatial memory in models
of social aggregation. The framework utilizes Bayesian estimation
parameters that are continuously distributed in time and space as
proxies for animals' spatial memory. The result is a hybrid
Lagrangian-Eulerian model in which the effects of cognitive state and
behavioural responses to historical spatial data on individual-, group-and population-level distributions of social animals can be
explicitly investigated.
Tags
Advection-diffusion equations