Diffusion of individual birds in starling flocks
Andrea Cavagna, Silvio M. Duarte Queiros, Irene Giardina, Fabio, Stefanini, Massimiliano Viale

TL;DR
This study analyzes how individual starlings move within flocks, revealing superdiffusive, anisotropic behavior and border retention, which influence the flock's collective dynamics and interaction network evolution.
Contribution
It provides quantitative data on bird diffusion in flocks, highlighting the role of diffusion in neighbor changes and border dynamics, advancing understanding of collective animal behavior.
Findings
Birds diffuse faster than Brownian particles (superdiffusion).
Diffusion is strongly anisotropic within the flock.
Border birds stay longer than expected, indicating a barrier effect.
Abstract
Flocking is a paradigmatic example of collective animal behaviour, where decentralized interaction rules give rise to a globally ordered state. In the emergence of order out of self-organization we find similarities between biological systems, as bird flocks, and some physical systems, as ferromagnets. In both cases, the tendency of individuals to align to their neighbours gives rise to a polarized state. There is, however, one crucial difference: the interaction network within an animal group is not necessarily fixed in time, as each individual moves and may change its neighbours. Therefore, the dynamical interaction mechanism in biological and physical system can be quite different, not only due to the gross disparity in the complexity of the individual entities, but also because of the potential role of inter-individual motion. To assess the relevance of this mechanism it is…
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