Applying collective motion models to study discordant individual behaviours within a school of fish.

R Soc Open Sci

Department of Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications Engineering, and Naval Architecture (DITEN), University of Genoa, 16145 Genoa, Italy.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Computational models effectively mimic common behaviors in schools of fish through simple individual interactions, but they haven't fully explored behaviors that diverge from the group's tendencies.
  • The study investigates counter-rotation, where a fish moves against the school's direction, using a model with three interaction zones (repulsion, orientation, and attraction) in a 3D space.
  • Results indicate that while repulsion plays a role in starting and stopping counter-rotations, temporary counter-rotations can also occur solely from attraction in non-uniform densities, aligning with real-life observations in underwater footage.

Article Abstract

Computational models of collective motion successfully reproduce the most common behaviours of a school of fish, using only a few elementary interactions between individuals. However, their ability to also reproduce individual behaviours that are discordant from those of the group has not yet been adequately investigated. In this paper, a self-propelled particle model using three interaction zones is considered in relation to the counter-rotation of an individual: a phenomenon observable in real schools of fish milling in a torus, when an individual moves in the same torus but in the opposite direction for a certain period of time. This study shows that the interactions of repulsion, orientation and attraction between individuals moving at constant speed in a three-dimensional space, with asynchronous updating, can generate temporary counter-rotations. The analysis of such events sheds light on the mechanisms that start the counter-rotation and those that end it. Although the contribution of the repulsion interaction is often significant to start and terminate the counter-rotation, it does not prove to be decisive. Indeed, it is observed that even when interactions between individuals are limited to attraction alone, temporary counter-rotations of individuals occur, provided the fish density along the circumference is not uniform. Some of these conclusions, deduced from the simulations performed, are visually consistent with what is observed in some underwater video recordings of milling schools of fish.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10698483PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.231618DOI Listing

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