BACKGROUND: Foraging in groups offers animals a number of advantages, such as increasing their likelihood of finding food or detecting and avoiding predators. In order for a group to remain together, there has to be some degree of coordination of behaviour and movement between its members (which may in some cases be initiated by a decision-making leader, and in other cases may emerge as an underlying property of the group). For example, behavioural synchronisation is a phenomenon where animals within a group initiate and then continue to conduct identical behaviours, and has been characterised for a wide range of species. We examine how a pair of animals should behave using a state-dependent approach, and ask what conditions are likely to l...
Group living is a common strategy among animals and has arisen independently in over 300 species of ...
There is increasing evidence that animal groups can maintain coordinated behaviour and make collecti...
The ubiquity of consistent inter-individual differences in behavior (“animal personalities”) [1, 2] ...
<div><p>Studies of coordinated movement have found that, in many animal species, bolder individuals ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.It...
Studies of coordinated movement have found that, in many animal species, bolder individuals are more...
Studies on leadership have focused either on physiological state as the key predictor (i.e. "leading...
Foraging animals experience interruptions to foraging for a variety of reasons, such as spatial posi...
International audienceGame-theoretical models have been highly influential in behavioural ecology. H...
Within animal societies, individuals often differ greatly in their level of investment in cooperativ...
In the context of social foraging, predator detection has been the subject of numerous studies, whic...
International audienceWhen group members possess differing information about the environment, they m...
There is a strong body of evidence that patterns of collective behaviour in grouping animals are gov...
In the context of social foraging, predator detection has been the subject of numerous studies, whic...
Moving animal groups display remarkable feats of coordination. This coordination is largely achieved...
Group living is a common strategy among animals and has arisen independently in over 300 species of ...
There is increasing evidence that animal groups can maintain coordinated behaviour and make collecti...
The ubiquity of consistent inter-individual differences in behavior (“animal personalities”) [1, 2] ...
<div><p>Studies of coordinated movement have found that, in many animal species, bolder individuals ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.It...
Studies of coordinated movement have found that, in many animal species, bolder individuals are more...
Studies on leadership have focused either on physiological state as the key predictor (i.e. "leading...
Foraging animals experience interruptions to foraging for a variety of reasons, such as spatial posi...
International audienceGame-theoretical models have been highly influential in behavioural ecology. H...
Within animal societies, individuals often differ greatly in their level of investment in cooperativ...
In the context of social foraging, predator detection has been the subject of numerous studies, whic...
International audienceWhen group members possess differing information about the environment, they m...
There is a strong body of evidence that patterns of collective behaviour in grouping animals are gov...
In the context of social foraging, predator detection has been the subject of numerous studies, whic...
Moving animal groups display remarkable feats of coordination. This coordination is largely achieved...
Group living is a common strategy among animals and has arisen independently in over 300 species of ...
There is increasing evidence that animal groups can maintain coordinated behaviour and make collecti...
The ubiquity of consistent inter-individual differences in behavior (“animal personalities”) [1, 2] ...