RESUMO
Schooling fish heavily rely on visual cues to interact with neighbors and avoid obstacles. The availability of sensory information is influenced by environmental conditions and changes in the physical environment that can alter the sensory environment of the fish, which in turn affects individual and group movements. In this study, we combine experiments and data-driven modeling to investigate the impact of varying levels of light intensity on social interactions and collective behavior in rummy-nose tetra fish. The trajectories of single fish and groups of fish swimming in a tank under different lighting conditions were analyzed to quantify their movements and spatial distribution. Interaction functions between two individuals and the fish interaction with the tank wall were reconstructed and modeled for each light condition. Our results demonstrate that light intensity strongly modulates social interactions between fish and their reactions to obstacles, which then impact collective motion patterns that emerge at the group level.
Assuntos
Comportamento Social , Interação Social , Animais , Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Peixes/fisiologia , Natação/fisiologiaRESUMO
We report and characterize the emergence of a noise-induced state of quenched disorder in a generic model describing a dense sheet of active polar disks. In this state, self-propelled disks become jammed with random orientations, only displaying small fluctuations about their mean positions and headings. The quenched disorder phase appears at intermediate noise levels, between moving polar order and standard dynamic disorder. We show that it results from retrograde forces produced by angular fluctuations with Ornstein-Uhlenbeck dynamics, compute its critical noise, and argue that it could emerge in a variety of systems.