Misconceptions about quantifying animal encounter and interaction processes
Debraj Das, V. M. Kenkre, Ran Nathan, and Luca Giuggioli

TL;DR
This paper introduces a general framework based on reaction diffusion theory to quantify animal interactions and encounters, addressing the lack of a unified approach in movement ecology.
Contribution
It proposes a novel, physics-inspired formalism for analyzing animal interactions, unifying diverse species-specific methods and enabling cross-taxa comparisons.
Findings
Reaction diffusion models effectively describe information transfer between animals.
The framework distinguishes between encounter probability and first-encounter probability.
Analytical and numerical comparisons reveal differences between formal approaches.
Abstract
Quantifying animal interactions is crucial for understanding various ecological processes, including social community structures, predator-prey dynamics, spreading of pathogens and information. Despite the ubiquity of interaction processes among animals and the advancements in tracking technologies enabling simultaneous monitoring of multiple individuals, a common theoretical framework to analyse movement data is still lacking. The diverse mechanisms governing how organisms perceive the proximity of others have led to species-specific theoretical approaches, hindering a common currency with which to evaluate and compare findings across taxa. We propose a general framework, borrowing tools from statistical physics, specifically from the theory of reaction diffusion processes. While some of these tools have been employed to predict pathogen transmission events, they have not yet pervaded…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Species Distribution and Climate Change
