Engineering sensorial delay to control phototaxis and emergent collective behaviors
Mite Mijalkov, Austin McDaniel, Jan Wehr, Giovanni Volpe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how adjusting the sensory delay in autonomous agents, such as robots, can control their collective behaviors like aggregation or segregation, despite noisy motion and simple signaling.
Contribution
It introduces the concept that sensory delay is a key parameter for tuning collective behaviors in autonomous agents, supported by experimental and numerical evidence.
Findings
Delay controls transition from segregation to clustering
Behavior depends on ratio of delay to reorientation time
Applicable to 3D active agents like drones
Abstract
Collective motions emerging from the interaction of autonomous mobile individuals play a key role in many phenomena, from the growth of bacterial colonies to the coordination of robotic swarms. For these collective behaviours to take hold, the individuals must be able to emit, sense and react to signals. When dealing with simple organisms and robots, these signals are necessarily very elementary, e.g. a cell might signal its presence by releasing chemicals and a robot by shining light. An additional challenge arises because the motion of the individuals is often noisy, e.g. the orientation of cells can be altered by Brownian motion and that of robots by an uneven terrain. Therefore, the emphasis is on achieving complex and tunable behaviors from simple autonomous agents communicating with each other in robust ways. Here, we show that the delay between sensing and reacting to a signal…
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