Composite collective decision-making
Authored by Tomer J Czaczkes, Benjamin Czaczkes, Carolin Iglhaut, Juergen Heinze
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.2723
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.9k219
Abstract
Individual animals are adept at making decisions and have cognitive
abilities, such as memory, which allow them to hone their decisions.
Social animals can also share information. This allows social animals to
make adaptive group-level decisions. Both individual and collective
decision-making systems also have drawbacks and limitations, and while
both are well studied, the interaction between them is still poorly
understood. Here, we study how individual and collective decision-making
interact during ant foraging. We first gathered empirical data on
memory-based foraging persistence in the ant Lasius niger. We used these
data to create an agent-based model where ants may use social
information (trail pheromones), private information (memories) or both
to make foraging decisions. The combined use of social and private
information by individuals results in greater efficiency at the group
level than when either information source was used alone. The modelled
ants couple consensus decision-making, allowing them to quickly exploit
high-quality food sources, and combined decision-making, allowing
different individuals to specialize in exploiting different resource
patches. Such a composite collective decision-making system reaps the
benefits of both its constituent parts. Exploiting such insights into
composite collective decision-making may lead to improved
decision-making algorithms.
Tags
Leadership
social information
Animal groups
Recruitment
Protocol
Foraging behavior
Trail pheromones
Ant colonies
Lasius-niger
Food