Scale-free correlations in bird flocks
Andrea Cavagna, Alessio Cimarelli, Irene Giardina, Giorgio Parisi,, Raffaele Santagati, Fabio Stefanini, Massimiliano Viale

TL;DR
This study reveals that bird flocks exhibit scale-free behavioral correlations, allowing them to respond collectively to environmental changes efficiently, which is crucial for survival under predatory threats.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that behavioral correlations in bird flocks are scale-free and extend with flock size, indicating a critical system poised for maximal response.
Findings
Behavioral correlations scale with flock size
Correlations are scale-free, affecting all group members
Flocks behave as critical systems for optimal response
Abstract
From bird flocks to fish schools, animal groups often seem to react to environmental perturbations as if of one mind. Most studies in collective animal behaviour have aimed to understand how a globally ordered state may emerge from simple behavioural rules. Less effort has been devoted to understanding the origin of collective response, namely the way the group as a whole reacts to its environment. Yet collective response is the adaptive key to survivor, especially when strong predatory pressure is present. Here we argue that collective response in animal groups is achieved through scale-free behavioural correlations. By reconstructing the three-dimensional position and velocity of individual birds in large flocks of starlings, we measured to what extent the velocity fluctuations of different birds are correlated to each other. We found that the range of such spatial correlation does…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
