Paper ID: 2303.17906

Environmental path-entropy and collective motion

Harvey L. Devereux, Matthew S. Turner

Inspired by the swarming or flocking of animal systems we study groups of agents moving in unbounded 2D space. Individual trajectories derive from a ``bottom-up'' principle: individuals reorient to maximise their future path entropy over environmental states. This can be seen as a proxy for keeping options open, a principle that may confer evolutionary fitness in an uncertain world. We find an ordered (co-aligned) state naturally emerges, as well as disordered states or rotating clusters; similar phenotypes are observed in birds, insects and fish, respectively. The ordered state exhibits an order-disorder transition under two forms of noise: (i) standard additive orientational noise, applied to the post-decision orientations (ii) ``cognitive'' noise, overlaid onto each individual's model of the future paths of other agents. Unusually, the order increases at low noise, before later decreasing through the order-disorder transition as the noise increases further.

Submitted: Mar 31, 2023