Ant groups 'more efficient than Google' in processing data
While individual 'scout' ants may seem chaotic in their movements,
they are leaving a pheromone trails to allow other ants to follow them
to food sources.
The dedication and stamina of the worker ant, toiling through the
summer months and preparing for winter, were celebrated in Aesop's
Fables - in contrast to the lazy, singing grasshopper, unready for the
hardships ahead.
Now research shows that ants don't just flourish because they work
hard and will slavishly sacrifice themselves for the collective.
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Ants were found to create ‘highly complex networks’ in their
search for food |
Their success is also due to their group ability to process
information "far more efficiently than Google" in the daily search for
food, according to scientists.
A major behavioural mathematics study, which could also have
ramifications for how we understand human behaviour on the internet,
used complex computer modelling to reveal how ants bring order to chaos
by creating "highly complex networks" to govern their actions.
It found that not only are ants "surprisingly efficient", but they
are able to deploy ingenious navigation strategies to divide themselves
between "scout" and "gathering" ants during "complex feed-search
movements".
The joint Chinese-German study, found that while individual "scout"
ants may seem "chaotic" in their movements, they are leaving a trail of
pheromones to allow following "gathering" ants to refine and shorten
their journeys to food sources in the vicinity of the colony.
As this journey is repeated again and again by worker ants carrying
their loads, a "self-reinforcing effect of efficiency" creates a shorter
trail, saving the colony the time and energy of "continued chaotic
foraging".
"While single ants can appear chaotic and random-like, they very
quickly become an ordered line of ants crossing the woodland floor in
the search for food," co-author of the study Prof Jurgen Kurths said.
He added: "That transition between chaos and order is an important
mechanism and I'd go so far as to say that the learning strategy
involved in that, is more accurate and complex than a Google search.
These insects are, without doubt, more efficient than Google in
processing information about their surroundings."
Previous studies had shown that worker ants assigned the most
dangerous food-gathering tasks tended to be older, less valuable
insects.
This suggested that ant colonies were reluctant to risk their
younger, more productive members.
However, the new study reveals that older ants are valued for their
increased knowledge of their nest's surroundings.
According to Prof Kurths, the mathematical model used in the study -
which converted well-known ant behaviour patterns into equations and
algorithms - is equally applicable to other animals that share homing
instincts, such as albatrosses.
It could even be used to provide a "new perspective" on behavioural
patterns of humans in areas as diverse as transportation systems and how
we browse the internet.The study comes a week after a team from the
Georgia Institute of Technology revealed that ants' skills at building
stable tunnels in loose sand could aid in the design of a new generation
of search-and-rescue robots.
The team used high-speed cameras to observe how fire ants can use
their antennae as extra limbs to catch themselves when they fall, in a
development that can be reproduced in the development of fledgling
rescue technologies.
- The Independent
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