Flocking is a typical example of emergent collective behavior, where interactions between individuals produce collective patterns on the large scale. Here we show how a quantitative microscopic theory for directional ordering in a flock can be derived directly from field data. We construct the minimally structured (maximum entropy) model consistent with experimental correlations in large flocks of starlings. The maximum entropy model shows that local, pairwise interactions between birds are sufficient to correctly predict the propagation of order throughout entire flocks of starlings, with no free parameters. We also find that the number of interacting neighbors is independent of flock density, confirming that interactions are ruled by topological rather than metric distance. Finally, by comparing flocks of different sizes, the model correctly accounts for the observed scale invariance of long-range correlations among the fluctuations in flight direction.

Statistical mechanics for natural flocks of birds

2012

Abstract

Flocking is a typical example of emergent collective behavior, where interactions between individuals produce collective patterns on the large scale. Here we show how a quantitative microscopic theory for directional ordering in a flock can be derived directly from field data. We construct the minimally structured (maximum entropy) model consistent with experimental correlations in large flocks of starlings. The maximum entropy model shows that local, pairwise interactions between birds are sufficient to correctly predict the propagation of order throughout entire flocks of starlings, with no free parameters. We also find that the number of interacting neighbors is independent of flock density, confirming that interactions are ruled by topological rather than metric distance. Finally, by comparing flocks of different sizes, the model correctly accounts for the observed scale invariance of long-range correlations among the fluctuations in flight direction.
2012
Istituto dei Sistemi Complessi - ISC
Inglese
109
13
4786
4791
6
http://www.pnas.org/content/109/13/4786.full
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
animal groups
statistical inference
Work in Rome was supported in part by Grants IIT-Seed Artswarm, ERC - StG n. 257126 and AFOSR-Z80910. Include Supporting Information.
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
William Bialek ; Andrea Cavagn b,c; Irene Giardina b,c; Thierry Mora ; Edmondo Silvestri b,c; Massimiliano Viale b,c; Aleksandra M Walczak
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
   Empirical analysis and theoretical modelling of self-organized collective behaviour in three-dimensions: from insect swarms and bird flocks to new schemes of distributed coordination.
   SWARM
   FP7
   257126
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/20740
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