The instability of followers and emergent vorticity in flocking behaviour for an experimental interaction rule
Michael Small, Xiaoke Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates how simple interaction rules in simulated bird flocks lead to stable or unstable collective behaviors, revealing that introducing random followers causes a phase transition from stable to unstable flock dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates that adding a small number of random followers induces a phase transition, destabilizing flock structure and altering emergent collective behaviors.
Findings
Stable flock behavior with fixed neighbors and regular shape.
Introduction of followers causes instability and fluidity in flock structure.
Flock rotation and meandering decrease with followers.
Abstract
Computational models of collective behavior in birds has allowed us to infer interaction rules directly from experimental data. Using a generic form of these rules we explore the collective behavior and emergent dynamics of a simulated swarm. For a wide range of flock size and interaction extent (the fixed number of neighbors with which an individual will interact) we find that the computational collective is inherently stable --- individuals are attracted to one another and will position themselves a preferred distance from their fixed neighbors within a rigid lattice. Nonetheless, the irregular overall shape of the flock, coupled with the need for individuals on the boundary to move towards their neighbors creates a torque which leads the flock to rotate and then meander. We argue that this "rolling meander" is a very good proxy for real collective behavior in animal species and yet…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Behavior and Reproduction · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · Diffusion and Search Dynamics
