Authors
Nikolai WF Bode, A Jamie Wood, Daniel W Franks
Publication date
2011/2/1
Journal
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Volume
65
Issue
2
Pages
117-130
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Description
The theory of collective motion and the study of animal social networks have, each individually, received much attention. Currently, most models of collective motion do not consider social network structure. The implications for considering collective motion and social networks together are likely to be important. Social networks could determine how populations move in, split up into and form separate groups (social networks affecting collective motion). Conversely, collective movement could change the structure of social networks by creating social ties that did not exist previously and maintaining existing ties (collective motion affecting social networks). Thus, there is a need to combine the two areas of research and examine the relationship between network structure and collective motion. Here, we review different modelling approaches that combine social network structures and collective motion. Although …
Total citations
2011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202444591210710827522
Scholar articles
NWF Bode, AJ Wood, DW Franks - Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, 2011