Spatial structure and information transfer in visual networks
Winnie Poel, Claudia Winklmayr, Pawel Romanczuk

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the physical spatial arrangement and body characteristics of individuals in groups influence visual interaction networks and the transmission of information, with implications for animal behavior, robotics, and crowd dynamics.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the impact of spatial structure, density, and body shape on visual networks and information spread, considering physical and sensory constraints.
Findings
Spatial configuration significantly affects network connectivity.
Physical occlusion influences information transfer efficiency.
Different group shapes alter contagion dynamics.
Abstract
In human and animal groups, social interactions often rely on the transmission of information via visual observation of the behavior of others. These visual interactions are governed by the laws of physics and sensory limits. Individuals appear smaller when far away and thus become harder to detect visually, while close by neighbors tend to occlude large areas of the visual field and block out interactions with individuals behind them. Here, we systematically study the effect of a group's spatial structure, its density as well as polarization and aspect ratio of the physical bodies, on the properties of the visual interaction network. In such a network individuals are connected if they can see each other as opposed to other interaction models such as metric or topological networks that omit these limitations due to the individual's physical bodies. We study the effect that spatial…
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