ROAIApr 1

Go Big or Go Home: Simulating Mobbing Behavior with Braitenbergian Robots

arXiv:2604.003506.9h-index: 7
AI Analysis

This work is incremental, with implications for simulating action selection in artificial life and designing control architectures for autonomous agents.

The study simulated mobbing behavior in Braitenbergian robots using Webots to investigate how call range and group size affect success, finding that both variables significantly impact mobbing outcomes.

We used the Webots robotics simulation platform to simulate a dyadic avoiding and mobbing predator behavior in a group of Braitenbergian robots. Mobbing is an antipredator adaptation used by some animals in which the individuals cooperatively attack or harass a predator to protect themselves. One way of coordinating a mobbing attack is using mobbing calls to summon other individuals of the mobbing species. We imitated this mechanism and simulated Braitenbergian robots that use mobbing calls when they face a light source (representing an inanimate predator) and mob it if they can summon allies, otherwise, they escape from it. We explore the effects of range of mobbing call (infinite range, mid-range and low-range) and the size of the robot group (ten robots vs three) on the overall success of mobbing. Our results suggest that both variables have significant impacts. This work has implications for simulations of action selection in artificial life and designing control architectures for autonomous agents.

Foundations

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

Your Notes