Social networks improve leaderless group navigation by facilitating long-distance communication
Authored by A Jamie Wood, Nikolai W F Bode, Daniel W Franks
Date Published: 2012
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Research Councils UK (RCUK)
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Group navigation is of great importance for many animals, such as
migrating flocks of birds or shoals of fish. One theory states that
group membership can improve navigational accuracy compared to limited
or less accurate individual navigational ability in groups without
leaders ({''}Many-wrongs principle{''}). Here, we simulate leaderless
group navigation that includes social connections as preferential
interactions between individuals. Our results suggest that underlying
social networks can reduce navigational errors of groups and increase
group cohesion. We use network summary statistics, in particular network
motifs, to study which characteristics of networks lead to these
improvements. It is networks in which preferences between individuals
are not clustered, but spread evenly across the group that are
advantageous in group navigation by effectively enhancing long-distance
information exchange within groups. We suggest that our work predicts a
base-line for the type of social structure we might expect to find in
group-living animals that navigate without leaders {[}Current Zoology 58
(2): 329-341, 2012].
Tags
Fish