Short-range interaction vs long-range correlation in bird flocks
Abstract
Bird flocks are a paradigmatic example of collective motion. One of the prominent experimental traits discovered about flocks is the presence of long range velocity correlations between individuals, which allow them to influence each other over the large scales, keeping a high level of group coordination. A crucial question is to understand what is the mutual interaction between birds generating such nontrivial correlations. Here we use the Maximum Entropy (ME) approach to infer from experimental data of natural flocks the effective interactions between birds. Compared to previous studies, we make a significant step forward as we retrieve the full functional dependence of the interaction on distance and find that it decays exponentially over a range of a few individuals. The fact that ME gives a short-range interaction even though its experimental input is the long-range correlation function, shows that the method is able to discriminate the relevant information encoded in such correlations and single out a minimal number of effective parameters. Finally, we show how the method can be used to capture the degree of anisotropy of mutual interactions.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1407.6887,
title = {Short-range interaction vs long-range correlation in bird flocks},
author = {Andrea Cavagna and Lorenzo Del Castello and Supravat Dey and Irene Giardina and Stefania Melillo and Leonardo Parisi and Massimiliano Viale},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1407.6887},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
21 pages, 7 figures, 1 table