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Ants determine their next move at rest: Motor planning and causality in complex systems

Hunt, Edmund R.; Baddeley, Roland J.; Worley, Alan; Sendova-Franks, Ana B.; Franks, Nigel R.

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Authors

Edmund R. Hunt

Roland J. Baddeley

Alan Worley

Ana B. Sendova-Franks

Nigel R. Franks



Abstract

© 2016 The Authors. 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 individual Temnothorax 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 lone T. albipennis ants exploring a large arena outside the nest, both when the arena is clean and when it contains chemical information left by previous nest-mates. This implies that these movement characteristics originate from the same individual neural and/or physiological mechanism(s), operating without immediate regard to social influences. However, the presence of pheromones and/or other cues was found to affect the inter-event speed correlations. Hence we suggest that ants’ motor planning results in intermittent response to the social environment: movement duration is adjusted in response to social information only between movements, not during them. This environmentally flexible, intermittently responsive movement behaviour points towards a spatially allocated division of labour in this species. It also prompts more general questions on collective animal movement and the role of intermittent causation from higher to lower organizational levels in the stability of complex systems.

Citation

Hunt, E. R., Baddeley, R. J., Worley, A., Sendova-Franks, A. B., & Franks, N. R. (2016). Ants determine their next move at rest: Motor planning and causality in complex systems. Royal Society Open Science, 3(1), 150534. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150534

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 26, 2015
Publication Date Jan 1, 2016
Deposit Date Jan 18, 2016
Publicly Available Date Feb 9, 2016
Journal Royal Society Open Science
Electronic ISSN 2054-5703
Publisher Royal Society, The
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Issue 1
Pages 150534
DOI https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150534
Keywords movement, motor planning, self-similarity, division of labour, intermittent top-down causality, complex social systems
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/915259
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150534

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