Escape cascades as a behavioral contagion process with adaptive network dynamics
Wenhan Wu, Xiaoping Zheng, Pawel Romanczuk

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spatially-explicit agent-based model that couples behavioral contagion with dynamic network changes due to movement, revealing how movement parameters influence cascade size in collective animal escape responses.
Contribution
It advances prior models by incorporating dynamic network evolution driven by movement, showing how movement parameters affect contagion spread in animal groups.
Findings
Higher escape speeds generally reduce cascade size.
The initial escape direction significantly influences contagion spread.
Greater directional noise promotes larger behavioral cascades.
Abstract
Complex behavioral contagion in collective evasion of mobile animal groups can be predicted by reconstructing quantitative interaction networks. Based on the assumption of time-scale separation between a fast contagion process and a slower movement response, the underlying interaction networks have been previously assumed to be static, determined by the spatial structure at the onset of the collective escape response. This idealization does not account for the temporal evolution of the spatial network structure, which may have a major impact on the behavioral contagion dynamics. Here, we propose a spatially-explicit, agent-based model for the coupling between behavioral contagion and the network dynamics originating from the spreading movement response. We explore the impact of movement parameters (startle speed, initial directionality, and directional noise) on average cascade size. By…
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