Saturday, November 13, 2010

How do they do it?




Anyone who has seen flocks of birds or schools of fish is familiar with this phenomenon of large numbers of individuals in a fast-moving group appearing to move in a co-ordinated way, and it's not immediately clear how they coordinate themselves, said Dora Biro, a zoologist at Oxford University.
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Our question was, how do groups like flocks of pigeons make decisions about what to do and where to go?
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The GPS backpacks carried by the pigeons enabled the scientists to precisely monitor the birds' movements, relative to each other, every 0.2 seconds of their journey from the point where the scientists released them to their home loft in Budapest, 15km away.
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Previously, people had assumed democratic decisions, where every bird's preferences are somehow averaged out, and that's what the group ends up doing.
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Or there might be a single leader or a small number of leaders that everyone follows
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But what we were able to do by tracking these birds with individual GPS units was to resolve the leader-follower relationship within the flock.
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What we found was a more sophisticated and refined mechanism for how the decisions are made
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There wasn't a single leader, nor was there a kind of egalitarian decision-making where everyone had an equal vote.
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Instead, each bird did have a vote, but the weight that each vote carried differed between birds.
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It represented a kind of hierarchy where the decisions of some birds near the top of the hierarchy carried more weight in terms of what the birds did than the birds lower down the hierarchy, who were still influential but to a lesser degree, said Dr Biro, who carried out the study with Tamás Vicsek of Eötvös University in Budapest.
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Whether such effects come from some individuals being more motivated to lead, or being inherently better navigators perhaps with greater navigational knowledge, is an intriguing question we don't yet have an answer to
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The loft of pigeons in the study consisted of 10 birds whose every movement was recorded as they flew in a flock from one location to another.
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The analysis, published in the journal Nature, described how each bird moved in relation to its neighbours, with some individuals leading more than others.
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It's neither a completely democratic system, where everybody gets the vote, nor [one with] a single leader or a few leaders responsible for the decisions.
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But in fact every individual gets a kind of input into what the group as a whole should do," Dr Biro said.
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If this was honed by evolution, if there was a selective advantage for individuals in the group to make decisions in this way, then it might represent a particularly efficient form of group decision making...
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It is possible that the mechanism we saw in these pigeons generalises to other species and to other group decision-making contexts, even in humans," Dr Biro said.
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Dr Biro

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