Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems

The emergence of collective patterns from repeated local interactions between individuals is a common feature to most living systems, spanning a variety of scales from cells to animals and humans. Subjects of this thesis are two aspects of emergent complexity in living systems: collective movement a...

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Main Author: Bottinelli, Arianna
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Tillämpad matematik och statistik 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303943
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-506-2599-8
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-3039432016-11-16T05:07:14ZModelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systemsengBottinelli, AriannaUppsala universitet, Tillämpad matematik och statistikUppsala2016animal collective behaviourtransport networkscrowd dynamicscomplex systemsantsfishThe emergence of collective patterns from repeated local interactions between individuals is a common feature to most living systems, spanning a variety of scales from cells to animals and humans. Subjects of this thesis are two aspects of emergent complexity in living systems: collective movement and transport network formation. For collective movement, this thesis studies the role of movement-mediated information transfer in fish decision-making. The second project on collective movement takes inspiration from granular media and soft mode analysis and develops a new approach to describe the emergence of collective phenomena from physical interactions in extremely dense crowds. As regards transport networks, this thesis proposes a model of network growth to extract simple, biologically plausible rules that reproduce topological properties of empirical ant trail networks.  In the second project on transport networks, this thesis starts from the simple rule of “connecting each new node to the closest one”, that describes ants building behavior, to study how balancing local building costs and global maintenance costs influences the growth and topological properties of transport networks. These projects are addressed through a modeling approach and with the aim of identifying minimal sets of basic mechanisms that are most likely responsible of large-scale complex patterns. Mathematical models are always based on empirical observations and are, when possible, compared to experimental data. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303943urn:isbn:978-91-506-2599-8Uppsala Dissertations in Mathematics, 1401-2049 ; 96application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic animal collective behaviour
transport networks
crowd dynamics
complex systems
ants
fish
spellingShingle animal collective behaviour
transport networks
crowd dynamics
complex systems
ants
fish
Bottinelli, Arianna
Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
description The emergence of collective patterns from repeated local interactions between individuals is a common feature to most living systems, spanning a variety of scales from cells to animals and humans. Subjects of this thesis are two aspects of emergent complexity in living systems: collective movement and transport network formation. For collective movement, this thesis studies the role of movement-mediated information transfer in fish decision-making. The second project on collective movement takes inspiration from granular media and soft mode analysis and develops a new approach to describe the emergence of collective phenomena from physical interactions in extremely dense crowds. As regards transport networks, this thesis proposes a model of network growth to extract simple, biologically plausible rules that reproduce topological properties of empirical ant trail networks.  In the second project on transport networks, this thesis starts from the simple rule of “connecting each new node to the closest one”, that describes ants building behavior, to study how balancing local building costs and global maintenance costs influences the growth and topological properties of transport networks. These projects are addressed through a modeling approach and with the aim of identifying minimal sets of basic mechanisms that are most likely responsible of large-scale complex patterns. Mathematical models are always based on empirical observations and are, when possible, compared to experimental data.
author Bottinelli, Arianna
author_facet Bottinelli, Arianna
author_sort Bottinelli, Arianna
title Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
title_short Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
title_full Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
title_fullStr Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
title_full_unstemmed Modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
title_sort modelling collective movement and transport network formation in living systems
publisher Uppsala universitet, Tillämpad matematik och statistik
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303943
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-506-2599-8
work_keys_str_mv AT bottinelliarianna modellingcollectivemovementandtransportnetworkformationinlivingsystems
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