Hmm, not apparently users of arxiv.org either. Here are the raw videos of sheep in pastures, might be good bedtime watching? https://zenodo.org/record/6905807
In my experience, swarms are following the mouse, or chasing a randomly fleeing agent, or just wandering around randomly, or following some gradient of pheromone left by Guerin. I honestly never thought sheep went anywhere on purpose unless being herded. But according to Wikipedia they have dominance hierarchies in the flock and score as only slightly less intelligent than pigs. There are reports of a flock learning to cross a cattle guard by rolling over the grid on their backs, though it may be a shaggy dog story. It sounds like a trick some bored kids on holiday might teach a flock. I don't know how crowd leader selection goes. It sounds like the presumption was that the dominant sheep had the job until it got fired. But this research suggests that sheep aren't so dogmatic. In fact, you can almost hear Graeber saying: "see, even sheep aren't that attached to dominance hierarchies" -- rec -- On Mon, Nov 21, 2022 at 12:56 PM Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote: > Roger - > > From hackernews > https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-022-01769-8 > corrected link from comments to > "Sheep flocks alternate their leader and achieve collective intelligence" > The secret sauce of american democracy. > > -- rec -- > > I wasn't able to read the (paywall) article, but was intrigued by the > abstract's implications. > > The following concluding statement felt a little *projective* > > *Our analysis suggests that it is possible to conceive intermittent > collective strategies that take advantage of both hierarchical and > democratic organizational schemes.* > > But I assume the terms of question (democratic/hierarchical) are shortcuts > for more subtle/complex concepts that they elaborate in the article. > > I'm not a close follower of Swarm literature but I assume there is already > precedent for thinking about "leader election" (to defer to the democracy > analogy)... maybe you or someone else has more insight into what they are > saying here and how it fits into the larger body of study? > > - Steve > -. --- - / ...- .- .-.. .. -.. / -- --- .-. ... . / -.-. --- -.. . > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe / Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom > https://bit.ly/virtualfriam > to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ > archives: 5/2017 thru present > https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/ > 1/2003 thru 6/2021 http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/ >
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