Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/23570
Title: Ants determine their next move at rest
Authors: R. Hunt, Edmund
J. Baddeley, Roland
Worley, Alan
Keywords: Biology
Biocomplexity
Behaviour
Cognition
Movement
Motor planning
Self-similarity
Division of labour
Intermittent top-down causality
Complex social systems
Issue Date: 2016
Abstract: To find useful work to do for their colony, individual eusocial animals have to move, somehow staying attentive to relevant social information. Recent research on individualTemnothorax albipennis ants moving inside their colony’s nest found a power-law relationship between a movement’s duration and its average speed, and a universal speed profile for movements showing that they mostly fluctuate around a constant average speed. From this predictability it was inferred that movement durations are somehow determined before the movement itself. Here, we find similar results in loneT. albipennisants exploring a large arena outside the nest, both when the arena is clean and when it contains chemical information left by previous nest-mates.
URI: https://lib.hpu.edu.vn/handle/123456789/23570
Appears in Collections:Education

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