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      Inherent noise can facilitate coherence in collective swarm motion.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Animals, Computer Simulation, Flight, Animal, Grasshoppers, Models, Biological, Movement, Noise, Starlings

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          Abstract

          Among the most striking aspects of the movement of many animal groups are their sudden coherent changes in direction. Recent observations of locusts and starlings have shown that this directional switching is an intrinsic property of their motion. Similar direction switches are seen in self-propelled particle and other models of group motion. Comprehending the factors that determine such switches is key to understanding the movement of these groups. Here, we adopt a coarse-grained approach to the study of directional switching in a self-propelled particle model assuming an underlying one-dimensional Fokker-Planck equation for the mean velocity of the particles. We continue with this assumption in analyzing experimental data on locusts and use a similar systematic Fokker-Planck equation coefficient estimation approach to extract the relevant information for the assumed Fokker-Planck equation underlying that experimental data. In the experiment itself the motion of groups of 5 to 100 locust nymphs was investigated in a homogeneous laboratory environment, helping us to establish the intrinsic dynamics of locust marching bands. We determine the mean time between direction switches as a function of group density for the experimental data and the self-propelled particle model. This systematic approach allows us to identify key differences between the experimental data and the model, revealing that individual locusts appear to increase the randomness of their movements in response to a loss of alignment by the group. We give a quantitative description of how locusts use noise to maintain swarm alignment. We discuss further how properties of individual animal behavior, inferred by using the Fokker-Planck equation coefficient estimation approach, can be implemented in the self-propelled particle model to replicate qualitatively the group level dynamics seen in the experimental data.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          19336580
          2667078
          10.1073/pnas.0811195106

          Chemistry
          Animals,Computer Simulation,Flight, Animal,Grasshoppers,Models, Biological,Movement,Noise,Starlings
          Chemistry
          Animals, Computer Simulation, Flight, Animal, Grasshoppers, Models, Biological, Movement, Noise, Starlings

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