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Mar 10, 2025

Self-Organization in Massive Fish Schools

Date: March 10, 2025 | 11:30 am – 12:30 pm
Speaker: Eva Kanso, University of Southern California
Location: Raiffeisen Lecture Hall
Language: English

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The remarkable cohesion and coordination observed in animal groups is thought to arise from scale-free correlations, where changes in the behavior of one animal influence others in the group, regardless of the distance between them.  In this talk, I explore scale-free correlation and information propagation in mathematical models of massive schools of fish of the order of 10,000 individuals. I show that (1) as the school size increases, flow interactions destabilize global polarization, creating locally polarized clusters that dynamically self-organize, split and reassemble; (2) while correlations in cohesive and polarized clusters are scale free, splitting events are preceded by a decrease in correlation length; (3) information propagates linearly in time within cohesive groups, thanks to the non-reciprocal nature of interactions between individuals; and (4) the speed of information propagation within cohesive groups is robust to group size, but varies with self-organization: merging of separate clusters increases the speed of information transfer within each cluster, while splitting and fragmentation decrease it. I conclude by commenting on the implications of these findings to size regulation and behavioral adaptations in living animal groups.

More Information:

Date:
March 10, 2025
11:30 am – 12:30 pm

Speaker:
Eva Kanso, University of Southern California

Location:
Raiffeisen Lecture Hall

Language:
English

Contact:

Diana Gruber

Email:
diana.gruber@ista.ac.at

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