22–24 Jun 2022
Asia/Bangkok timezone
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Modeling the navigation of a weaver ant in a simple, unfamiliar environment

S1 Physics Innovation
24 Jun 2022, 15:30
15m
AMRTHYST

AMRTHYST

Board: O-S1-27
Oral Presentation Physics Innovation S1 Physics Innovation

Speaker

Lattawat Charoonratana (Suranaree University of Technology)

Description

The ant species Oecophylla smaragdina, commonly known as the weaver ant, is native to tropical Asia and Africa. Ants are known for highly-organized, co-operative behavior and weaver ants are particularly adept at working together, in numbers, to accomplish large-scale tasks. Considered an example of a coherent many-body system, weaver ants have been studied by researchers in various fields. As a first step towards understanding weaver ant coordinated motion, we want to find the algorithm that a single ant employs for its own navigation. Having previously tracked the motion of individual ants within a small, bounded arena, we here present a simple theoretical model that can describe this motion. We show that their navigation can be adequately modeled as Brownian motion: the ant velocity changes by random impulses drawn independently from a robust probability distribution. Using establish Brownian motion theory, we show that the ant’s tendency to remain near boundaries can be explained as a result of pure chance: having been stopped at the boundary, random motion is unlikely to bring the ant back to the arena interior. All qualitative aspects of ant motion are captured by a model with few parameters and without any assumption that an ant has preferences for position or velocity.

Authors

Lattawat Charoonratana (Suranaree University of Technology) Michael Smith (Suranaree University of Technology) Sukrit Suksombat (Suranaree University of Technology) Theerawee Thiwatwaranikul (Suranaree University of Technology) Panyaphong Paisanpan (Suranaree University of Technology)

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