Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from each other's movement. The outcome of group navigation will depend on how individuals respond to each other within a flock, school, swarm, or herd. Despite the abundance of modelling studies, only recently have researchers developed techniques to determine the interaction rules among real animals. Here we use high-resolution GPS (global positioning system) tracking to study these interactions in pairs of pigeons flying home from a familiar site. Momentary changes in velocity indicate alignment with the neighbour's direction, as well as attraction or avoidance depending on distance. Responses were stronger when the neighbour was in front. From ...
We analysed pigeon flock flights using GPS trajectory data to reveal the most important kinematic as...
Social animals routinely are challenged to make consensus decisions about movement directions and ro...
Complex patterns of collective behaviour may emerge through self-organization, from local interactio...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Social animals routinely are challenged to make consensus decisions about movement directions and ro...
This thesis investigates how collective decisions in bird flocks arise from simple rules, the factor...
For animals that travel in groups, the directional choices of conspecifics are potentially a rich so...
Animals that travel together in groups display a variety of fascinating motion patterns thought to b...
SummaryA central problem faced by animals traveling in groups is how navigational decisions by group...
This thesis focuses on conflict resolution and collective decision-making in co-navigating pigeons, ...
A central problem faced by animals traveling in groups is how navigational decisions by group member...
In many species, group members obtain benefits from moving collectively, such as enhanced foraging e...
We analysed pigeon flock flights using GPS trajectory data to reveal the most important kine-matic a...
We analysed pigeon flock flights using GPS trajectory data to reveal the most important kinematic as...
Social animals routinely are challenged to make consensus decisions about movement directions and ro...
Complex patterns of collective behaviour may emerge through self-organization, from local interactio...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Travelling in groups gives animals opportunities to share route information by following cues from e...
Social animals routinely are challenged to make consensus decisions about movement directions and ro...
This thesis investigates how collective decisions in bird flocks arise from simple rules, the factor...
For animals that travel in groups, the directional choices of conspecifics are potentially a rich so...
Animals that travel together in groups display a variety of fascinating motion patterns thought to b...
SummaryA central problem faced by animals traveling in groups is how navigational decisions by group...
This thesis focuses on conflict resolution and collective decision-making in co-navigating pigeons, ...
A central problem faced by animals traveling in groups is how navigational decisions by group member...
In many species, group members obtain benefits from moving collectively, such as enhanced foraging e...
We analysed pigeon flock flights using GPS trajectory data to reveal the most important kine-matic a...
We analysed pigeon flock flights using GPS trajectory data to reveal the most important kinematic as...
Social animals routinely are challenged to make consensus decisions about movement directions and ro...
Complex patterns of collective behaviour may emerge through self-organization, from local interactio...