TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical framework showing that Weber's law, a fundamental perceptual principle, underpins the stability of animal groups by counteracting diffusion and maintaining cohesive spatial organization.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical approach linking Weber's law to group stability, demonstrating its role in individual responses that preserve collective structure.
Findings
Weber's law responses create an anti-diffusion effect at the group level.
Group configurations can be maintained over time with Weber's law-based individual responses.
The study provides a universal principle underlying animal group cohesion across species.
Abstract
Group living animals form aggregations and flocks that remain cohesive in spite of internal movements of individuals. This is possible because individual group members repeatedly adjust their position and motion in response to the position and motion of other group members. Here we develop a theoretical approach to address the question, what general features -- if any -- underlie the interaction rules that mediate group stability in animals of all species? We do so by considering how the spatial organisation of a group would change in the complete absence of interactions. Without interactions, a group would disperse in a way that can be easily characterised in terms of Fick's diffusion equations. We can hence address the inverse theoretical problem of finding the individual-level interaction responses that are required to counterbalance diffusion and to preserve group stability. We show…
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