Quantifying distributed information processing is crucial to understanding collective motion in animal groups. Recent studies have begun to apply rigorous methods based on information theory to quantify such distributed computation. Following this perspective, we use transfer entropy to quantify dynamic information flows locally in space and time across a school of fish during directional changes around a circular tank, i.e., U-turns. This analysis reveals peaks in information flows during collective U-turns and identifies two different flows: an informative flow (positive transfer entropy) from fish that have already turned to fish that are turning, and a misinformative flow (negative transfer entropy) from fish that have not turned yet to...