Summary: Researchers suggest that when in a group, ants behave in a similar fashion to networks of neurons in the brain.
Source: Rockefeller University
Temperatures are rising, and one colony of ants will soon have to make a collective decision. Each ant feels the rising heat beneath its feet but carries along as usual until, suddenly, the ants reverse course. The whole group rushes out as onea decision to evacuate has been made. It is almost as if the colony of ants has a greater, collective mind.
A newstudysuggests that indeed, ants as a group behave similar to networks of neurons in a brain.
RockefellersDaniel Kronauerand postdoctoral associate Asaf Gal developed a new experimental setup to meticulously analyze decision-making in ant colonies.
As reported in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they found that when a colony evacuates due to rising temperatures, its decision is a function of both the magnitude of the heat increase and the size of the ant group.
The findings suggest that ants combine sensory information with the parameters of their group to arrive at a group responsea process similar to neural computations giving rise to decisions.
We pioneered an approach to understand the ant colony as a cognitive-like system that perceives inputs and then translates them into behavioral outputs, says Kronauer, head of the Laboratory of Social Evolution and Behavior.
This is one of the first steps toward really understanding how insect societies engage in collective computation.
A new paradigm
At its most basic level, decision-making boils down to a series of computations meant to maximize benefits and minimize costs. For instance, in a common type of decision-making called sensory response thresholding, an animal has to detect sensory input like heat past a certain level to produce a certain costly behavior, like moving away. If the rise in temperature isnt big enough, it wont be worth it.
Kronauer and Gal wanted to investigate how this type of information processing occurs at the collective level, where group dynamics come into play. They developed a system in which they could precisely perturb an ant colony with controlled temperature increases.
To track the behavioral responses of individual ants and the entire colony, they marked each insect with different colored dots and followed their movements with a tracking camera.
As the researchers expected, colonies of a set size of 36 workers and 18 larvae dependably evacuated their nest when the temperature hit around 34 degrees Celsius. This finding makes intuitive sense, Kronauer says, because if you become too uncomfortable, you leave.
However, the researchers were surprised to find that the ants were not merely responding to temperature itself. When they increased the size of the colony from 10 to 200 individuals, the temperature necessary to trigger the decision to vacate increased. Colonies of 200 individuals, for example, held out until temperatures soared past 36 degrees.
It seems that the threshold isnt fixed. Rather, its an emergent property that changes depending on the group size, Kronauer says.
Individual ants are unaware of the size of their colony, so how can their decision depend on it? He and Gal suspect that the explanation has to do with the way pheromones, the invisible messengers that pass information between ants, scale their effect when more ants are present.
They use a mathematical model to show that such a mechanism is indeed plausible. But they do not know why larger colonies would require higher temperatures to pack up shop.
Kronauer ventures that it could simply be that the larger the colonys size, the more onerous it is to relocate, pushing up the critical temperature for which relocations happen.
In future studies, Kronauer and Gal hope to refine their theoretical model of the decision-making process in the ant colony by interfering with more parameters and seeing how the insects respond. For example, they can tamper with the level of pheromones in the ants enclosure or create genetically altered ants with different abilities to detect temperature changes.
What weve been able to do so far is to perturb the system and measure the output precisely, Kronauer says. In the long term, the idea is to reverse engineer the system to deduce its inner workings in more and more detail.
Author: Katherine FenzSource: Rockefeller UniversityContact: Katherine Fenz Rockefeller UniversityImage: The image is credited to Daniel Kronauer
Original Research: Open access.The emergence of a collective sensory response threshold in ant colonies by Daniel Kronauer et al. PNAS
Abstract
The emergence of a collective sensory response threshold in ant colonies
The sensory response threshold is a fundamental biophysical property of biological systems that underlies many physiological and computational functions, and its systematic study has played a pivotal role in uncovering the principles of biological computation.
Here, we show that ant colonies, which perform computational tasks at the group level, have emergent collective sensory response thresholds.
Colonies respond collectively to step changes in temperature and evacuate the nest during severe perturbations. This response is characterized by a group-sizedependent threshold, and the underlying dynamics are dominated by social feedback between the ants.
Using a binary network model, we demonstrate that a balance between short-range excitatory and long-range inhibitory interactions can explain the emergence of the collective response threshold and its size dependency.
Our findings illustrate how simple social dynamics allow insect colonies to integrate information about the external environment and their internal state to produce adaptive collective responses.
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Ant Colonies Behave Like Neural Networks When Making Decisions - Neuroscience News
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