Publications by authors named "Lisa R O'Bryan"

Article Synopsis
  • Effective group decision-making is essential for social organisms to achieve coordination and maintain cohesion, but variability in their environments complicates this process.
  • High ecological heterogeneity can create barriers to information transfer, while high individual heterogeneity can lead to conflicts of interest within the group.
  • The article discusses how active communication can help mitigate these challenges, facilitating better decision-making in vertebrate groups and proposes a framework for future research on the relationship between communication and heterogeneity in group dynamics.
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Most studies of collective animal behaviour rely on short-term observations, and comparisons of collective behaviour across different species and contexts are rare. We therefore have a limited understanding of intra- and interspecific variation in collective behaviour over time, which is crucial if we are to understand the ecological and evolutionary processes that shape collective behaviour. Here, we study the collective motion of four species: shoals of stickleback fish (), flocks of homing pigeons (), a herd of goats () and a troop of chacma baboons ().

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Food-associated calls have received much research attention due to their potential to refer to discovered food in a word-like manner. Studies have found that in many species, food-associated calls attract receivers to the food patch, suggesting these calls play roles in food sharing, cooperation and competition. Additionally, in various species, these calls play a role that has received much less attention: mediating social interactions among foragers that are already nearby or within the food patch, independently of whether they attract outside foragers.

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The marginal value theorem is an optimal foraging model that predicts how efficient foragers should respond to both their ecological and social environments when foraging in food patches, and it has strongly influenced hypotheses for primate behavior. Nevertheless, experimental tests of the marginal value theorem have been rare in primates and observational studies have provided conflicting support. As a step towards filling this gap, we test whether the foraging decisions of captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) adhere to the assumptions and qualitative predictions of the marginal value theorem.

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