English

Generating self-organizing collective behavior using separation dynamics from experimental data

Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems 2015-06-04 v1 Quantitative Methods

Abstract

Mathematical models for systems of interacting agents using simple local rules have been proposed and shown to exhibit emergent swarming behavior. Most of these models are constructed by intuition or manual observations of real phenomena, and later tuned or verified to simulate desired dynamics. In contrast to this approach, we propose using a model that attempts to follow an averaged rule of the essential distance-dependent collective behavior of real pigeon flocks, which was abstracted from experimental data. By using a simple model to follow the behavioral tendencies of real data, we show that our model can exhibit emergent self-organizing dynamics such as flocking, pattern formation, and counter-rotating vortices. The range of behaviors observed in our simulations are richer than the standard models of collective dynamics, and should thereby give potential for new models of complex behavior.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1204.6547,
  title  = {Generating self-organizing collective behavior using separation dynamics from experimental data},
  author = {Graciano Dieck Kattas and Xiao-ke Xu and Michael Small},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1204.6547},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Submitted to Chaos

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:56:25.623Z