Quantum Structure in Competing Lizard Communities
Diederik Aerts, Jan Broekaert, Marek Czachor, Maciej Kuna, Barry, Sinervo, Sandro Sozzo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the competitive interactions among lizard morphs exhibit quantum-like structures, including contextuality and entanglement, modeled effectively using Hilbert space formalism, revealing non-classical behavioral patterns.
Contribution
It extends quantum modeling techniques from human cognition to animal behavior, specifically analyzing lizard competition dynamics with a quantum-theoretic framework.
Findings
Violation of Bell's inequality in lizard competition data
Explicit quantum Hilbert space model for lizard interactions
Entanglement observed in lizard confrontation states
Abstract
Almost two decades of research on applications of the mathematical formalism of quantum theory as a modeling tool in domains different from the micro-world has given rise to many successful applications in situations related to human behavior and thought, more specifically in cognitive processes of decision-making and the ways concepts are combined into sentences. In this article, we extend this approach to animal behavior, showing that an analysis of an interactive situation involving a mating competition between certain lizard morphs allows to identify a quantum theoretic structure. More in particular, we show that when this lizard competition is analyzed structurally in the light of a compound entity consisting of subentities, the contextuality provided by the presence of an underlying rock-paper-scissors cyclic dynamics leads to a violation of Bell's inequality, which means it is of…
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