Weierstrassian Lévy walks are a by-product of crawling.

Eur Phys J E Soft Matter

Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, AL5 2JQ, UK.

Published: July 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Weierstrassian Lévy walks are a type of random walk that defy the central limit theorem and are associated with scale invariance, challenging previous assumptions of their purely mathematical nature.
  • These walks can be naturally generated through the crawling motion of certain animals, particularly observed in diverse molluscs like mussels and mud snails.
  • The study reveals that Lévy walks also appear in other species, such as Drosophila larvae, suggesting that these movement patterns arise from various mechanisms rather than being exclusively a strategic searching behavior.

Article Abstract

Weierstrassian Lévy walks are one of the simplest random walks which do not satisfy the central limit theorem and have come to epitomize scale invariance even though they were initially regarded as being a mathematical abstraction. Here, I show how these Lévy walks can be generated intrinsically as a by-product of crawling, a common but ancient form of locomotion. This may explain why Weierstrassian Lévy walks provide accurate representations of the movement patterns of a diverse group of molluscs-certain mussels, mud snails and limpets. I show that such movements are not specific to molluscs as they are also evident in Drosophila larvae. The findings add to the growing realization that there are many idiosyncratic, seemingly accidental pathways to Lévy walking. And that the occurrence of Lévy walks need not be attributed to the execution of an advantageous searching strategy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epje/s10189-021-00100-2DOI Listing

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