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Journal ArticleDOI

Modulation of trail laying in the ant Lasius niger (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and its role in the collective selection of a food source

TLDR
Simulations of this model showed that the observed modulation of trail laying with respect to food source quality is sufficient in itself to account for the systematic selection of the richer source seen in the experiments.
Abstract
Foragers of the ant Lasius nigerexploiting a 1 Msugar source were found to lay 43 %more trail marks than those exploiting a 0.05 or a 0.1 Msource. The trail laying per forager decreased during the course of individual recruitment episodes, and the mean lifetime of the trail pheromone was estimated to be 47 min. A mathematical function describing the probability that a forager chooses one of two paths in relation to the amount of trail pheromone on them closely fitted experimental data. These results were incorporated into a model describing the recruitment dynamics of L. niger.Simulations of this model showed that the observed modulation of trail laying with respect to food source quality is sufficient in itself to account for the systematic selection of the richer source seen in the experiments.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Coordination of Pheromone Deposition Might Solve Time-Constrained Travelling Salesman Problem

TL;DR: These results suggest that the agents perform adaptive travels by coordinating some complex pheromone depositions as new metaheuristic models for solving the time-constrained Travelling Salesman Problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary stability of social interaction rules in collective decision-making

Anna Sigalou, +1 more
- 21 Dec 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explore the performance of one commonly used decision making rule in terms of the expected decision accuracy of individuals employing it and show that parameters of this model obey necessary relationships under the assumption that animals are evolutionarily optimised to their environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bundling and segregation affect pheromone deposition, but not choice, in an ant

- 22 Nov 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the effect of bundling on the perception of value in ants and found that the difference between binary choice and pheromone deposition in this case may be due to a possible linearity in distance perception in ants.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The self-organizing exploratory pattern of the argentine ant

TL;DR: A minimal model shows how the exploratory pattern may be generated by the individual workers' simple trail-laying and -following behavior, illustrating how complex collective structures in insect colonies may be based on self-organization.
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Collective decision-making in honey bees: how colonies choose among nectar sources

TL;DR: It is suggested that honey bee colonies possess decentralized decision-making because it combines effectiveness with simplicity of communication and computation within a colony.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trails and U-turns in the Selection of a Path by the Ant Lasius niger

TL;DR: The selection of the path is shown to be a collective process whereby trail laying and following amplifies small initial differences in the traffic on each path caused by these three mechanisms, and the foragers show no significant tendency to follow the path they used previously.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collective decision making through food recruitment

TL;DR: A series of experiments shows how the andLasius niger uses its trail recruitment system to select between two food sources, simultaneously presented with to 1M sucrose solution and when offered a 1M solution together with a 0.1M solution.
Journal ArticleDOI

A model of collective nectar source selection by honey bees : self-organization through simple rules

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model that describes the honey bee colony's decision-making process, which consists of a system of non-linear differential equations describing the activity of the foraging bees.
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