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      Information Collection and Spread by Networks of Patrolling Ants

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      The American Naturalist
      University of Chicago Press

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          Abstract

          To study how a social group, such as an ant colony, monitors events occurring throughout its territory, we present a model of a network of patrolling ants engaged in information collection and dissemination. In this network, individuals follow independent paths through a region and can exchange signals with each other upon encounter. The paths of the ants are described by correlated random walks. Through simulations and analytic approximations, including a new approach to the spatial logistic equation, we study the efficiency with which such a network discovers a constantly changing stream of "events" scattered throughout the region and the speed with which information spreads to all ants in the network. We demonstrate that efficiency of event discovery and the speed of information spread are enhanced by increased network size and straighter individual ant paths, and that these two effects interact. The results lead to predictions regarding the relations among species-specific movement patterns, colony size, and ant ecology.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The American Naturalist
          The American Naturalist
          University of Chicago Press
          0003-0147
          1537-5323
          September 1992
          September 1992
          : 140
          : 3
          : 373-400
          Article
          10.1086/285418
          19426049
          9cb8b66e-b795-41e8-a1df-165056419e2d
          © 1992
          History

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