Results 21 to 30 of about 3,553,441 (219)
Anatomy of leadership in collective behaviour. [PDF]
Understanding the mechanics behind the coordinated movement of mobile animal groups (collective motion) provides key insights into their biology and ecology, while also yielding algorithms for bio-inspired technologies and autonomous systems.
Joshua Garland +3 more
semanticscholar +5 more sources
Artificial intelligence chatbots mimic human collective behaviour.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) chatbots, such as ChatGPT, have been shown to mimic individual human behaviour in a wide range of psychological and economic tasks. Do groups of AI chatbots also mimic collective behaviour?
James K He +3 more
semanticscholar +3 more sources
Correlation functions as a tool to study collective behaviour phenomena in biological systems [PDF]
Much of interesting complex biological behaviour arises from collective properties. Important information about collective behaviour lies in the time and space structure of fluctuations around average properties, and two-point correlation functions are a
T. Grigera
semanticscholar +1 more source
Using a motion-capture system and custom head-calibration methods, we reconstructed the head-centric view of freely behaving pigeons and examined how they orient their head when presented with various types of attention-getting objects at various ...
Fumihiro Kano +4 more
doaj +1 more source
A key aspect of understanding social interactions in marine animals is determining whether individuals freely interact in fission-fusion groups, or have spatially structured interactions, for example territories or home ranges.
Zoë Goverts +8 more
doaj +1 more source
A guide to sampling design for GPS‐based studies of animal societies
GPS‐based tracking is widely used for studying wild social animals. Much like traditional observational methods, using GPS devices requires making a number of decisions about sampling that can affect the robustness of a study's conclusions.
Peng He +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Size-dependent response of the mussel collective behaviour to plastic leachates and predator cues.
Both individual and collective anti-predator behaviours are essential for the survival of many species. This is particularly true for ecosystem engineers such as intertidal mussels, which through their collective behaviour create novel habitats for a ...
Marine Uguen +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Collective behaviours in organoids
Collective behaviour emerges from interacting units within communities, such as migrating herds, swimming fish schools, and cells within tissues. At the microscopic level, collective behaviours include collective cell migration in development and cancer invasion, rhythmic gene expression in pattern formation, cell competition in homeostasis and cancer,
Yang, Qiutan, Liberali, Prisca
openaire +2 more sources
Estimating animal populations is essential for conservation. Censusing large congregations is especially important since these are priorities for protection, but efficiently counting hundreds of thousands of moving animals remains a challenge.
Benjamin Koger +6 more
doaj +1 more source
The benefits of swimming together
When a fish beats its tail, it produces vortices in the water that other fish could take advantage of to save energy while swimming.
Iain D Couzin, Liang Li
doaj +1 more source

