SYROBIO-PHNov 15, 2013

Perception and Steering Control in Paired Bat Flight

arXiv:1311.4419v18 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses coordination mechanisms in animal group navigation, but it is incremental as it builds on prior research on bat flight patterns.

The study tackled the problem of understanding how follower bats coordinate their flight with leaders, finding that existing pursuit laws fail to explain the behavior, and proposed a virtual loom-based steering law that matches observed trajectory statistics.

Animals within groups need to coordinate their reactions to perceived environmental features and to each other in order to safely move from one point to another. This paper extends our previously published work on the flight patterns of Myotis velifer that have been observed in a habitat near Johnson City, Texas. Each evening, these bats emerge from a cave in sequences of small groups that typically contain no more than three or four individuals, and they thus provide ideal subjects for studying leader-follower behaviors. By analyzing the flight paths of a group of M. velifer, the data show that the flight behavior of a follower bat is influenced by the flight behavior of a leader bat in a way that is not well explained by existing pursuit laws, such as classical pursuit, constant bearing and motion camouflage. Thus we propose an alternative steering law based on virtual loom, a concept we introduce to capture the geometrical configuration of the leader-follower pair. It is shown that this law may be integrated with our previously proposed vision-enabled steering laws to synthesize trajectories, the statistics of which fit with those of the bats in our data set. The results suggest that bats use perceived information of both the environment and their neighbors for navigation.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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