2 results match your criteria: "Center for International Collaboration and Advanced Studies in Primatology Kanrin 41-2[Affiliation]"

Social networks in primates: smart and tolerant species have more efficient networks.

Sci Rep

December 2014

1] Université de Strasbourg, Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien, Strasbourg, France [2] Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Département Ecologie, Physiologie et Ethologie, Strasbourg, France [3] Unit of Social Ecology, CP231, Université libre de Bruxelles, Campus Plaine, Bd du triomphe, 1050 Brussels, Belgium.

Network optimality has been described in genes, proteins and human communicative networks. In the latter, optimality leads to the efficient transmission of information with a minimum number of connections. Whilst studies show that differences in centrality exist in animal networks with central individuals having higher fitness, network efficiency has never been studied in animal groups.

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Animal behaviour exhibits fractal structure in space and time. Fractal properties in animal space-use have been explored extensively under the Lévy flight foraging hypothesis, but studies of behaviour change itself through time are rarer, have typically used shorter sequences generated in the laboratory, and generally lack critical assessment of their results. We thus performed an in-depth analysis of fractal time in binary dive sequences collected via bio-logging from free-ranging little penguins (Eudyptula minor) across full-day foraging trips (2(16) data points; 4 orders of temporal magnitude).

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