As a reminder, we'll meet back at St. John's tomorrow, Jan 4.
-S ____________________________________________________________________ Stephen.Guerin at Redfish.com www.Redfish.com 624 Agua Fria Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 mobile: (505)577-5828 office: Santa Fe, NM (505)995-0206 / London, UK +44 (0) 20 7993 4769 |
I am a lurker on this listserv and find many of the discussions here
interesting and valuable. Recently I was in Mexico and noticed a couple of interesting complex phenomena I thought I would share with this group. The first relates to frigatebird formations and ties in with observations of these birds I made last year. Last year, when in Mazatlan, I noticed that frigatebirds often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without flapping and that they tend to glide in disorderd configurations until they spontaneously undergo a phase change (it seems to me) when they align in vee formations - still gliding nonetheless. These are fantastic sights to see, since the birds seem to hang in the air in these vee formations without passing across the sky at the relatively high speeds of geese, for example. This year, in Cancun, I noticed frigatebirds gliding in disordered configurations and, waiting patiently for the phase change, I was disappointed when these changes did not occur. I wondered if I was imagining the alignments I saw last year in Mazatlan, but fairly certain I wasn't, I speculate why the phase changes did not occur among the birds I saw in Cancun. Firstly it's possible the frigatebird colonies on the Caribbean side of Mexico simply don't undergo these formations, being a slightly different sub-species or what have you. Perhaps, but I hypothesize that the wind speeds are the primary factor in determining whether formation phase changes occur. In Mazatlan last year in late Sept/early October, the wind speeds were low, I recall. In Cancun, wind speeds were significantly higher. I suggest that gliding in vee formations can only occur between a certain range of wind speed - if wind speed is too low, the birds cannot glide at all; if too high, they can glide, but they cannot align in vee formations. The critical range allows frigate birds to draft when gliding behind another while maintaining position, but above the range the drafting effect is too high and the birds get "sucked" through - or tend to fall, it looked to me - the low pressure areas and cannot hold their positions. Drafting ordinarily has the effect of saving energy (a la cyclists in a peloton), but if birds are gliding and already saving substantial energy by not flapping their wings, I wondered whether any significant energy savings benefit can be derived by aligning in vee formations while gliding. At first I thought not, but gliding inevitably requires some energy - small muscle coordination and positional adjustments - not as costly as flapping wings, but some energy is required. When frigatebirds form vees, I hypothesize there is in fact significant energy savings for those birds in drafting positions - small muscle contractions for positional adjustments may be reduced, and birds in these formations will expend less energy. They would not, I suggest, align in these ways if it were not for some energy savings benefit. Because frigatebirds do not generate the higher air pressure behind which to draft, such as geese do, or cyclists do, or fish in water do by propelling themselves through the medium (air or water), I suggest this form of energy savings constitutes a third type of "drafting". The other is energy reduction by huddling, such as penguins undergo. So I suggest three types of drafting occurrences: I Occurs when system components generate effective air or liquid pressure as they propel themselves through the medium; eg. cyclist pelotons, fish schools, geese in vees; II Occurs when system components remain stationery and air or liquid pressure is generated externally; eg frigatebirds in vees while gliding and remaining more or less positionally stable, and possibly some types of fish (here I suggest this may occur in fish swimming upstream, such as salmon, which may hold themselves in a stationery position against the flow of the water - I haven't specifically observed any interesting drafting formations as a result, although I have watched salmon swim upstream and speculate drafting formations do occur) III Occurs when system components remain stationery and environment temperature drops; eg. penguin huddles Type I exhibit phase changes from disordered states to ordered states and back again through hysteresis loops. For cyclists, when peloton speeds are higher than a critical speed/drafting threshold, disorder in the peloton occurs. In a peloton, density is generally higher at low speeds and density decreases as speeds increase. At a relatively high threshold speed, a peloton loses cohesiveness entirely. To resume cohesion, peloton speeds must fall to a lower threshold to resume cohesive formations (I've observed and documented this). The loop is clockwise (speed on Y axis, density/order on X) , but is the inverse of vehicle traffic hysteresis, for example, where density increases as speed decreases (note that drafting is not a factor in traffic). For frigatebirds, because order increases as windspeed increases to a threshold range, above which disorder occurs, wind speeds must only drop to within the critical range for order to occur again. As a result the hysteresis loop may not exist or is not as evident. I tentatively speculate this windspeed range is approximately equivalent to the magnitude of drafting benefit derived when birds are in drafting formations; similarly the height of the hysteresis loop in drafting cyclists is related to the drafting benefit derived (but may not precisely match it). So drafting parameter seems to represent a constant that manifests itself in related but different ways. For example, in Type 1 situations, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the hysteresis loop; in Type II where there is no hysteresis, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the critical range of speeds within which certain formations occur. Drafting parameter is thus also a general principle underlying the self-organized complex behaviour of a number of different systems. For Type III (penguin huddles), density/order increases as temperature drops (requiring greater energy output to remain warm, so a decrease in temperature is equivalent to an increase in speed in Type I situations); density/order decreases as temperature increases to some threshold, after which there is no huddle cohesion. Presumably at some very cold temperature the huddle cannot generate enough heat and disintegrates by penguins freezing to death. In the direction of temperature increase, the hysteresis loop occurs when disorder occurs at a critical temperature, but must fall to some lower threshold temperature for the huddle to occur again. In any event there is a lot more analysis to be made, and I have more to say even now, but here are a few observations. Basically, my point is that through my frigatebird observations, I've identified a third type of drafting situation. I had already identified the peloton (which is obvious and well documented) and huddle situations (which is not as obvious and not well documented). _____________ The second, slightly less rigourous observation I made when in Cancun was a clustering effect among cabs. In Cancun, and likely many parts of Mexico, all cabs are required to be of the same colors, so they are all easy to spot. There are also many, many cabs in Cancun - it appears about one in six vehicles is a taxi. On the roads, it appeared to me that frequently cab clusters, or several cabs near each other, would be driving within two degrees of each other, often within one degree. One explanation is that they often originate in the same location, many waiting at high person-density locations like the airport, the bus station, etc. However, I am not sure this explains the clustering on the roads, as cabs leaving from high density locations would not leave simultaneously when fares are widely distributed in time; they also do not have the same destinations. So, clustering must be due to something else, I think. Firstly, cab drivers tend to drive faster than the rest of the traffic, especially when they have a fare on board. I am wondering if their fast driving and deft abilities at weaving in and out of traffic allows them to agglomerate at stop lights. As traffic approaches stop lights, the slower driving traffic still leaves enough space for faster traffic further away from the light to slip through and make up a few spaces, even as traffic closest to the stop lights slow down and increase density. After a few such lights, faster traffic "sifts" through to the front, and ends up at the front. This is just an idea, and no doubt there are a number of problems with it (for example if cabs also tend to go through yellow and red lights, reducing agglomeration). Nonetheless, if the phenomenon is real - and I observed it to occur more often than just chance would seem to explain - then there must be a reason for it. In any event, I would be interested in any input others may have about both of these subjects. |
In addition to whatever aerodynamic advantage derives from the "V"
formation, another advantage might be that each bird (except the leader) has only to keep one other bird in sight to maintain its position and, therefore, to stay on course. The only other formation that I can think of that has this property is a diagonal line--that is half a "V". Maybe the frigate birds in Mazatlan had a destination (Cancun?) but the ones in the Yucatan did not because it wasn't the season to migrate. You were in Mazatlan in the fall. What time of the year were you in Cancun? Frank --- Frank C. Wimberly 140 Calle Ojo Feliz (505) 995-8715 or (505) 670-9918 (cell) Santa Fe, NM 87505 wimberly3 at earthlink.net -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 7:42 PM To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Cc: Gottfried Mayer Subject: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico I am a lurker on this listserv and find many of the discussions here interesting and valuable. Recently I was in Mexico and noticed a couple of interesting complex phenomena I thought I would share with this group. The first relates to frigatebird formations and ties in with observations of these birds I made last year. Last year, when in Mazatlan, I noticed that frigatebirds often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without flapping and that they tend to glide in disorderd configurations until they spontaneously undergo a phase change (it seems to me) when they align in vee formations - still gliding nonetheless. These are fantastic sights to see, since the birds seem to hang in the air in these vee formations without passing across the sky at the relatively high speeds of geese, for example. This year, in Cancun, I noticed frigatebirds gliding in disordered configurations and, waiting patiently for the phase change, I was disappointed when these changes did not occur. I wondered if I was imagining the alignments I saw last year in Mazatlan, but fairly certain I wasn't, I speculate why the phase changes did not occur among the birds I saw in Cancun. Firstly it's possible the frigatebird colonies on the Caribbean side of Mexico simply don't undergo these formations, being a slightly different sub-species or what have you. Perhaps, but I hypothesize that the wind speeds are the primary factor in determining whether formation phase changes occur. In Mazatlan last year in late Sept/early October, the wind speeds were low, I recall. In Cancun, wind speeds were significantly higher. I suggest that gliding in vee formations can only occur between a certain range of wind speed - if wind speed is too low, the birds cannot glide at all; if too high, they can glide, but they cannot align in vee formations. The critical range allows frigate birds to draft when gliding behind another while maintaining position, but above the range the drafting effect is too high and the birds get "sucked" through - or tend to fall, it looked to me - the low pressure areas and cannot hold their positions. Drafting ordinarily has the effect of saving energy (a la cyclists in a peloton), but if birds are gliding and already saving substantial energy by not flapping their wings, I wondered whether any significant energy savings benefit can be derived by aligning in vee formations while gliding. At first I thought not, but gliding inevitably requires some energy - small muscle coordination and positional adjustments - not as costly as flapping wings, but some energy is required. When frigatebirds form vees, I hypothesize there is in fact significant energy savings for those birds in drafting positions - small muscle contractions for positional adjustments may be reduced, and birds in these formations will expend less energy. They would not, I suggest, align in these ways if it were not for some energy savings benefit. Because frigatebirds do not generate the higher air pressure behind which to draft, such as geese do, or cyclists do, or fish in water do by propelling themselves through the medium (air or water), I suggest this form of energy savings constitutes a third type of "drafting". The other is energy reduction by huddling, such as penguins undergo. So I suggest three types of drafting occurrences: I Occurs when system components generate effective air or liquid pressure as they propel themselves through the medium; eg. cyclist pelotons, fish schools, geese in vees; II Occurs when system components remain stationery and air or liquid pressure is generated externally; eg frigatebirds in vees while gliding and remaining more or less positionally stable, and possibly some types of fish (here I suggest this may occur in fish swimming upstream, such as salmon, which may hold themselves in a stationery position against the flow of the water - I haven't specifically observed any interesting drafting formations as a result, although I have watched salmon swim upstream and speculate drafting formations do occur) III Occurs when system components remain stationery and environment temperature drops; eg. penguin huddles Type I exhibit phase changes from disordered states to ordered states and back again through hysteresis loops. For cyclists, when peloton speeds are higher than a critical speed/drafting threshold, disorder in the peloton occurs. In a peloton, density is generally higher at low speeds and density decreases as speeds increase. At a relatively high threshold speed, a peloton loses cohesiveness entirely. To resume cohesion, peloton speeds must fall to a lower threshold to resume cohesive formations (I've observed and documented this). The loop is clockwise (speed on Y axis, density/order on X) , but is the inverse of vehicle traffic hysteresis, for example, where density increases as speed decreases (note that drafting is not a factor in traffic). For frigatebirds, because order increases as windspeed increases to a threshold range, above which disorder occurs, wind speeds must only drop to within the critical range for order to occur again. As a result the hysteresis loop may not exist or is not as evident. I tentatively speculate this windspeed range is approximately equivalent to the magnitude of drafting benefit derived when birds are in drafting formations; similarly the height of the hysteresis loop in drafting cyclists is related to the drafting benefit derived (but may not precisely match it). So drafting parameter seems to represent a constant that manifests itself in related but different ways. For example, in Type 1 situations, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the hysteresis loop; in Type II where there is no hysteresis, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the critical range of speeds within which certain formations occur. Drafting parameter is thus also a general principle underlying the self-organized complex behaviour of a number of different systems. For Type III (penguin huddles), density/order increases as temperature drops (requiring greater energy output to remain warm, so a decrease in temperature is equivalent to an increase in speed in Type I situations); density/order decreases as temperature increases to some threshold, after which there is no huddle cohesion. Presumably at some very cold temperature the huddle cannot generate enough heat and disintegrates by penguins freezing to death. In the direction of temperature increase, the hysteresis loop occurs when disorder occurs at a critical temperature, but must fall to some lower threshold temperature for the huddle to occur again. In any event there is a lot more analysis to be made, and I have more to say even now, but here are a few observations. Basically, my point is that through my frigatebird observations, I've identified a third type of drafting situation. I had already identified the peloton (which is obvious and well documented) and huddle situations (which is not as obvious and not well documented). _____________ The second, slightly less rigourous observation I made when in Cancun was a clustering effect among cabs. In Cancun, and likely many parts of Mexico, all cabs are required to be of the same colors, so they are all easy to spot. There are also many, many cabs in Cancun - it appears about one in six vehicles is a taxi. On the roads, it appeared to me that frequently cab clusters, or several cabs near each other, would be driving within two degrees of each other, often within one degree. One explanation is that they often originate in the same location, many waiting at high person-density locations like the airport, the bus station, etc. However, I am not sure this explains the clustering on the roads, as cabs leaving from high density locations would not leave simultaneously when fares are widely distributed in time; they also do not have the same destinations. So, clustering must be due to something else, I think. Firstly, cab drivers tend to drive faster than the rest of the traffic, especially when they have a fare on board. I am wondering if their fast driving and deft abilities at weaving in and out of traffic allows them to agglomerate at stop lights. As traffic approaches stop lights, the slower driving traffic still leaves enough space for faster traffic further away from the light to slip through and make up a few spaces, even as traffic closest to the stop lights slow down and increase density. After a few such lights, faster traffic "sifts" through to the front, and ends up at the front. This is just an idea, and no doubt there are a number of problems with it (for example if cabs also tend to go through yellow and red lights, reducing agglomeration). Nonetheless, if the phenomenon is real - and I observed it to occur more often than just chance would seem to explain - then there must be a reason for it. In any event, I would be interested in any input others may have about both of these subjects. ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
In reply to this post by Hugh Trenchard
I just love watching birds and can see you do too! One behavior I like
especially is the flocking of birds at dusk. I don't know the details of where they're headed or even why they'd eventually roost by the hundreds in a single tree, but the way they soar in great weaving clouds that are pulled apart as small groups leave and draw out others, to then reform again and continue the dance, is just amazing. I've watched the behavior with many species, city, country, different places. It always comes clear to me that what they're doing is some kind of negotiation. You have to ask, what's the sense of their being in such a big group in the first place, and then why go through such extended gyrations, maybe 30-40 circles before deciding who sits where on what tree... For another one, what do you think is going on with the apparent global end of the great Canadian Geese migration? When I was a kid it was like clockwork, twice a year we'd see these beautiful high altitude formations of mysteriously honking great birds heading a couple thousand miles north or south. Now it seems they just quit! and hang out in the same parks and golf courses year round. That seems a very odd way to end an ancient habit of having two homes, shifting, for me, from being this remote beauty to an annoying local pest in just 30 years. That's not evolution. I think the idea that these fascinating patterns have some simple explanation other than the behavior of the birds themselves is questionable. We stumble into thinking that things are caused by the effect they have, which is backwards of course. That reasoning was popularized by, and somewhat reasonable for, genetic evolution where you're dealing with a record keeping system that's fairly reliable and can record some kinds of effects for the future instances of a behavior. For how birds socialize I think something else is needed. To me many things like these are better explained by looking at the opportunities being taken rather than the necessities being imposed, but that's a longer story. Anyway, my guess on why the Mazatlan frigatebirds went into set V formations after a period of gliding and the ones in Cancun didn't is that they were different birds, with different social habits. It could be that the ones you saw in Mazatlan were a community with strong leaders and the ones in Cancun weren't, or something. Clearly it's a whole lot easier to marvel at them than really understand what's happening. Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 9:42 PM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Cc: Gottfried Mayer > Subject: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > > > I am a lurker on this listserv and find many of the discussions here > interesting and valuable. Recently I was in Mexico and > noticed a couple of > interesting complex phenomena I thought I would share with this group. > > The first relates to frigatebird formations and ties in with > observations of > these birds I made last year. Last year, when in Mazatlan, I > noticed that > frigatebirds often hover and glide for several minutes at a > time without > flapping and that they tend to glide in disorderd > configurations until they > spontaneously undergo a phase change (it seems to me) when > they align in vee > formations - still gliding nonetheless. These are fantastic > sights to see, > since the birds seem to hang in the air in these vee > formations without > passing across the sky at the relatively high speeds of > geese, for example. > > This year, in Cancun, I noticed frigatebirds gliding in disordered > configurations and, waiting patiently for the phase change, I was > disappointed when these changes did not occur. I wondered if I was > imagining the alignments I saw last year in Mazatlan, but > fairly certain I > wasn't, I speculate why the phase changes did not occur among > the birds I > saw in Cancun. Firstly it's possible the frigatebird colonies on the > Caribbean side of Mexico simply don't undergo these > formations, being a > slightly different sub-species or what have you. Perhaps, > but I hypothesize > that the wind speeds are the primary factor in determining > whether formation > phase changes occur. > > In Mazatlan last year in late Sept/early October, the wind > speeds were low, > I recall. In Cancun, wind speeds were significantly higher. > I suggest that > gliding in vee formations can only occur between a certain > range of wind > speed - if wind speed is too low, the birds cannot glide at > all; if too > high, they can glide, but they cannot align in vee > formations. The critical > range allows frigate birds to draft when gliding behind another while > maintaining position, but above the range the drafting effect > is too high > and the birds get "sucked" through - or tend to fall, it > looked to me - the > low pressure areas and cannot hold their positions. > > Drafting ordinarily has the effect of saving energy (a la > cyclists in a > peloton), but if birds are gliding and already saving > substantial energy by > not flapping their wings, I wondered whether any significant > energy savings > benefit can be derived by aligning in vee formations while > gliding. At > first I thought not, but gliding inevitably requires some > energy - small > muscle coordination and positional adjustments - not as > costly as flapping > wings, but some energy is required. When frigatebirds form vees, I > hypothesize there is in fact significant energy savings for > those birds in > drafting positions - small muscle contractions for positional > adjustments > may be reduced, and birds in these formations will expend > less energy. They > would not, I suggest, align in these ways if it were not for > some energy > savings benefit. > > Because frigatebirds do not generate the higher air pressure > behind which to > draft, such as geese do, or cyclists do, or fish in water do > by propelling > themselves through the medium (air or water), I suggest this > form of energy > savings constitutes a third type of "drafting". The other is energy > reduction by huddling, such as penguins undergo. So I > suggest three types > of drafting occurrences: > > I Occurs when system components generate > effective air or > liquid pressure as they propel themselves through the medium; > eg. cyclist > pelotons, fish schools, geese in vees; > > II Occurs when system components remain > stationery and air or > liquid pressure is generated externally; eg frigatebirds in > vees while > gliding and remaining more or less positionally stable, and > possibly some > types of fish (here I suggest this may occur in fish swimming > upstream, such > as salmon, which may hold themselves in a stationery position > against the > flow of the water - I haven't specifically observed any > interesting drafting > formations as a result, although I have watched salmon swim > upstream and > speculate drafting formations do occur) > > III Occurs when system components remain stationery and > environment temperature drops; eg. penguin huddles > > Type I exhibit phase changes from disordered states to > ordered states and > back again through hysteresis loops. For cyclists, when > peloton speeds are > higher than a critical speed/drafting threshold, disorder in > the peloton > occurs. In a peloton, density is generally higher at low > speeds and density > decreases as speeds increase. At a relatively high threshold > speed, a > peloton loses cohesiveness entirely. To resume cohesion, > peloton speeds > must fall to a lower threshold to resume cohesive formations > (I've observed > and documented this). The loop is clockwise (speed on Y > axis, density/order > on X) , but is the inverse of vehicle traffic hysteresis, for > example, where > density increases as speed decreases (note that drafting is > not a factor in > traffic). > > For frigatebirds, because order increases as windspeed increases to a > threshold range, above which disorder occurs, wind speeds > must only drop to > within the critical range for order to occur again. As a result the > hysteresis loop may not exist or is not as evident. I > tentatively speculate > this windspeed range is approximately equivalent to the magnitude of > drafting benefit derived when birds are in drafting > formations; similarly > the height of the hysteresis loop in drafting cyclists is > related to the > drafting benefit derived (but may not precisely match it). > > So drafting parameter seems to represent a constant that > manifests itself in > related but different ways. For example, in Type 1 > situations, drafting > parameter indicates the magnitude of the hysteresis loop; in > Type II where > there is no hysteresis, drafting parameter indicates the > magnitude of the > critical range of speeds within which certain formations > occur. Drafting > parameter is thus also a general principle underlying the > self-organized > complex behaviour of a number of different systems. > > For Type III (penguin huddles), density/order increases as > temperature drops > (requiring greater energy output to remain warm, so a decrease in > temperature is equivalent to an increase in speed in Type I > situations); > density/order decreases as temperature increases to some > threshold, after > which there is no huddle cohesion. Presumably at some very > cold temperature > the huddle cannot generate enough heat and disintegrates by penguins > freezing to death. In the direction of temperature increase, > the hysteresis > loop occurs when disorder occurs at a critical temperature, > but must fall to > some lower threshold temperature for the huddle to occur again. > > In any event there is a lot more analysis to be made, and I > have more to say > even now, but here are a few observations. Basically, my > point is that > through my frigatebird observations, I've identified a third type of > drafting situation. I had already identified the peloton > (which is obvious > and well documented) and huddle situations (which is not as > obvious and not > well documented). _____________ > > The second, slightly less rigourous observation I made when > in Cancun was a > clustering effect among cabs. In Cancun, and likely many > parts of Mexico, > all cabs are required to be of the same colors, so they are > all easy to > spot. There are also many, many cabs in Cancun - it appears > about one in > six vehicles is a taxi. > > On the roads, it appeared to me that frequently cab clusters, > or several > cabs near each other, would be driving within two degrees of > each other, > often within one degree. One explanation is that they often > originate in > the same location, many waiting at high person-density > locations like the > airport, the bus station, etc. However, I am not sure this > explains the > clustering on the roads, as cabs leaving from high density > locations would > not leave simultaneously when fares are widely distributed in > time; they > also do not have the same destinations. So, clustering must > be due to > something else, I think. > > Firstly, cab drivers tend to drive faster than the rest of > the traffic, > especially when they have a fare on board. I am wondering if > their fast > driving and deft abilities at weaving in and out of traffic > allows them to > agglomerate at stop lights. As traffic approaches stop > lights, the slower > driving traffic still leaves enough space for faster traffic > further away > from the light to slip through and make up a few spaces, even > as traffic > closest to the stop lights slow down and increase density. > After a few such > lights, faster traffic "sifts" through to the front, and ends > up at the > front. This is just an idea, and no doubt there are a number > of problems > with it (for example if cabs also tend to go through yellow > and red lights, > reducing agglomeration). Nonetheless, if the phenomenon is > real - and I > observed it to occur more often than just chance would seem > to explain - > then there must be a reason for it. > > In any event, I would be interested in any input others may > have about both > of these subjects. > > > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > |
In reply to this post by Hugh Trenchard
Curious. I was wondering if, since the frigatebirds are aligning into
formations without flapping, if it would be easier to perceive if there were differences in the "yaw" of the bird wing or body relative to its position in the formation. If so, several hypotheses about aerodynamics on formation might be arise. If, for example, there was a pronounced yaw to the right on the right side of the V due purely to the drafting aerodynamics of the V (this is just an example) then the bird in its local frame might be adjusting its position relative to the bird in front, which would be somewhat to the left of where it "should" be, (given the local aerodynamic properties of the surrounding air (temperature, pressure, wind speed, etc) so the bird would work harder to adjust its position so that the bird in front would be more in the expected position. At some point the energy advantage gained by remaining in the V formation would be lost, and the V would not be supportable. Frigatebirds are relatively large, so the idea here is that any drafting effect would not occur uniformly on any given bird in a V formation, possibly causing various local yaws and compensations. Carl Hugh Trenchard wrote: > I am a lurker on this listserv and find many of the discussions here > interesting and valuable. Recently I was in Mexico and noticed a couple of > interesting complex phenomena I thought I would share with this group. > > The first relates to frigatebird formations and ties in with observations of > these birds I made last year. Last year, when in Mazatlan, I noticed that > frigatebirds often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without > flapping and that they tend to glide in disorderd configurations until they > spontaneously undergo a phase change (it seems to me) when they align in vee > formations - still gliding nonetheless. These are fantastic sights to see, > since the birds seem to hang in the air in these vee formations without > passing across the sky at the relatively high speeds of geese, for example. > > This year, in Cancun, I noticed frigatebirds gliding in disordered > configurations and, waiting patiently for the phase change, I was > disappointed when these changes did not occur. I wondered if I was > imagining the alignments I saw last year in Mazatlan, but fairly certain I > wasn't, I speculate why the phase changes did not occur among the birds I > saw in Cancun. Firstly it's possible the frigatebird colonies on the > Caribbean side of Mexico simply don't undergo these formations, being a > slightly different sub-species or what have you. Perhaps, but I hypothesize > that the wind speeds are the primary factor in determining whether formation > phase changes occur. > > In Mazatlan last year in late Sept/early October, the wind speeds were low, > I recall. In Cancun, wind speeds were significantly higher. I suggest that > gliding in vee formations can only occur between a certain range of wind > speed - if wind speed is too low, the birds cannot glide at all; if too > high, they can glide, but they cannot align in vee formations. The critical > range allows frigate birds to draft when gliding behind another while > maintaining position, but above the range the drafting effect is too high > and the birds get "sucked" through - or tend to fall, it looked to me - the > low pressure areas and cannot hold their positions. > > Drafting ordinarily has the effect of saving energy (a la cyclists in a > peloton), but if birds are gliding and already saving substantial energy by > not flapping their wings, I wondered whether any significant energy savings > benefit can be derived by aligning in vee formations while gliding. At > first I thought not, but gliding inevitably requires some energy - small > muscle coordination and positional adjustments - not as costly as flapping > wings, but some energy is required. When frigatebirds form vees, I > hypothesize there is in fact significant energy savings for those birds in > drafting positions - small muscle contractions for positional adjustments > may be reduced, and birds in these formations will expend less energy. They > would not, I suggest, align in these ways if it were not for some energy > savings benefit. > > Because frigatebirds do not generate the higher air pressure behind which to > draft, such as geese do, or cyclists do, or fish in water do by propelling > themselves through the medium (air or water), I suggest this form of energy > savings constitutes a third type of "drafting". The other is energy > reduction by huddling, such as penguins undergo. So I suggest three types > of drafting occurrences: > > I Occurs when system components generate effective air or > liquid pressure as they propel themselves through the medium; eg. cyclist > pelotons, fish schools, geese in vees; > > II Occurs when system components remain stationery and air or > liquid pressure is generated externally; eg frigatebirds in vees while > gliding and remaining more or less positionally stable, and possibly some > types of fish (here I suggest this may occur in fish swimming upstream, such > as salmon, which may hold themselves in a stationery position against the > flow of the water - I haven't specifically observed any interesting drafting > formations as a result, although I have watched salmon swim upstream and > speculate drafting formations do occur) > > III Occurs when system components remain stationery and > environment temperature drops; eg. penguin huddles > > Type I exhibit phase changes from disordered states to ordered states and > back again through hysteresis loops. For cyclists, when peloton speeds are > higher than a critical speed/drafting threshold, disorder in the peloton > occurs. In a peloton, density is generally higher at low speeds and density > decreases as speeds increase. At a relatively high threshold speed, a > peloton loses cohesiveness entirely. To resume cohesion, peloton speeds > must fall to a lower threshold to resume cohesive formations (I've observed > and documented this). The loop is clockwise (speed on Y axis, density/order > on X) , but is the inverse of vehicle traffic hysteresis, for example, where > density increases as speed decreases (note that drafting is not a factor in > traffic). > > For frigatebirds, because order increases as windspeed increases to a > threshold range, above which disorder occurs, wind speeds must only drop to > within the critical range for order to occur again. As a result the > hysteresis loop may not exist or is not as evident. I tentatively speculate > this windspeed range is approximately equivalent to the magnitude of > drafting benefit derived when birds are in drafting formations; similarly > the height of the hysteresis loop in drafting cyclists is related to the > drafting benefit derived (but may not precisely match it). > > So drafting parameter seems to represent a constant that manifests itself in > related but different ways. For example, in Type 1 situations, drafting > parameter indicates the magnitude of the hysteresis loop; in Type II where > there is no hysteresis, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the > critical range of speeds within which certain formations occur. Drafting > parameter is thus also a general principle underlying the self-organized > complex behaviour of a number of different systems. > > For Type III (penguin huddles), density/order increases as temperature drops > (requiring greater energy output to remain warm, so a decrease in > temperature is equivalent to an increase in speed in Type I situations); > density/order decreases as temperature increases to some threshold, after > which there is no huddle cohesion. Presumably at some very cold temperature > the huddle cannot generate enough heat and disintegrates by penguins > freezing to death. In the direction of temperature increase, the hysteresis > loop occurs when disorder occurs at a critical temperature, but must fall to > some lower threshold temperature for the huddle to occur again. > > In any event there is a lot more analysis to be made, and I have more to say > even now, but here are a few observations. Basically, my point is that > through my frigatebird observations, I've identified a third type of > drafting situation. I had already identified the peloton (which is obvious > and well documented) and huddle situations (which is not as obvious and not > well documented). _____________ > > The second, slightly less rigourous observation I made when in Cancun was a > clustering effect among cabs. In Cancun, and likely many parts of Mexico, > all cabs are required to be of the same colors, so they are all easy to > spot. There are also many, many cabs in Cancun - it appears about one in > six vehicles is a taxi. > > On the roads, it appeared to me that frequently cab clusters, or several > cabs near each other, would be driving within two degrees of each other, > often within one degree. One explanation is that they often originate in > the same location, many waiting at high person-density locations like the > airport, the bus station, etc. However, I am not sure this explains the > clustering on the roads, as cabs leaving from high density locations would > not leave simultaneously when fares are widely distributed in time; they > also do not have the same destinations. So, clustering must be due to > something else, I think. > > Firstly, cab drivers tend to drive faster than the rest of the traffic, > especially when they have a fare on board. I am wondering if their fast > driving and deft abilities at weaving in and out of traffic allows them to > agglomerate at stop lights. As traffic approaches stop lights, the slower > driving traffic still leaves enough space for faster traffic further away > from the light to slip through and make up a few spaces, even as traffic > closest to the stop lights slow down and increase density. After a few such > lights, faster traffic "sifts" through to the front, and ends up at the > front. This is just an idea, and no doubt there are a number of problems > with it (for example if cabs also tend to go through yellow and red lights, > reducing agglomeration). Nonetheless, if the phenomenon is real - and I > observed it to occur more often than just chance would seem to explain - > then there must be a reason for it. > > In any event, I would be interested in any input others may have about both > of these subjects. > > > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > > > |
Thanks for all your comments. Next time I'm in Mexico, I will definitely do
my best to get some video footage. My recollection of what I saw in October 2005 in Mazatlan is that the various yaws and compensations were easy to see, as you say. I can't remember how long the formations were stable - perhaps generally less than a minute, before the formation would break down (but I'm really just guessing) - but they were long enough to see the dynamics involved. And after the formations broke down, they would often reform again fairly soon. Regarding Phil's comment that the Mazatlan colonies were possibly just different from the Cancun colonies I will need to investigate that. (Frank - I was in Cancun over Christmas, by the way and the migration habits might be a factor involved in when and why they engage in vee formation - something else to investigate). It seems, though, it is unlikely that a single colony in Mazatlan would have developed the vee formation capacity completely independently of a colony in Cancun, especially when the distance between them is not really that great when we think in terms of bird migratory habits. So far, I still think the wind conditions are more likely what prevented vee formation in Cancun, but of course I will need a bit more evidence to support that. Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a factor in vee formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise without leaders to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize from some principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save energy by drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because there is a physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their drafting). It could be that frigatebird vee formations are simply derived from their inherent natural behaviours and have no basis in any underlying physical principles, but given the advantages conferred upon other types of organisms that engage in drafting dynamics and formations, it seems reasonable to ask if there is there is a physical principle underlying the formations. Nonetheless, what this all suggests to me that it is an area ripe for further study, and that very little work has been done to establish the universality of the "drafting principle" as I am calling it. I actually think it applies in a lot of other situations as well, from trail formation to aspects of economics, but that's little more than a gut feeling at this point. But I suppose, at the very least, until I can get some good footage of frigatebird formations and some wind speed measurements, we can only speculate as to what is happening with them. I'm not sure when I'll be in Mexico next, but I'll keep everyone posted as to what I see. If anyone else is going, please keep an eye out for the frigatebirds! Pelicans also fly in vees too, but they are more like geese, I think - they fly past at fairly high speed. On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really can't speculate. I live on the west coast of Canada in British Columbia and I still see vee formations going in all directions. But perhaps global warming is a factor in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay farther north all year round. Hugh Trenchard ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl Tollander" <[hidden email]> To: "The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group" <friam at redfish.com> Sent: Friday, January 05, 2007 10:16 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > Curious. I was wondering if, since the frigatebirds are aligning into > formations without > flapping, if it would be easier to perceive if there were differences in > the "yaw" of the > bird wing or body relative to its position in the formation. If so, > several hypotheses > about aerodynamics on formation might be arise. If, for example, there > was a pronounced > yaw to the right on the right side of the V due purely to the drafting > aerodynamics of the > V (this is just an example) then the bird in its local frame might be > adjusting its position > relative to the bird in front, which would be somewhat to the left of > where it "should" be, > (given the local aerodynamic properties of the surrounding air > (temperature, pressure, wind speed, etc) > so the bird would work harder to adjust its position so that the bird in > front would be > more in the expected position. At some point the energy advantage gained > by remaining > in the V formation would be lost, and the V would not be supportable. > > Frigatebirds are relatively large, so the idea here is that any drafting > effect would not occur > uniformly on any given bird in a V formation, possibly causing various > local yaws and compensations. > > Carl > > Hugh Trenchard wrote: >> I am a lurker on this listserv and find many of the discussions here >> interesting and valuable. Recently I was in Mexico and noticed a couple >> of >> interesting complex phenomena I thought I would share with this group. >> >> The first relates to frigatebird formations and ties in with observations >> of >> these birds I made last year. Last year, when in Mazatlan, I noticed >> that >> frigatebirds often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without >> flapping and that they tend to glide in disorderd configurations until >> they >> spontaneously undergo a phase change (it seems to me) when they align in >> vee >> formations - still gliding nonetheless. These are fantastic sights to >> see, >> since the birds seem to hang in the air in these vee formations without >> passing across the sky at the relatively high speeds of geese, for >> example. >> >> This year, in Cancun, I noticed frigatebirds gliding in disordered >> configurations and, waiting patiently for the phase change, I was >> disappointed when these changes did not occur. I wondered if I was >> imagining the alignments I saw last year in Mazatlan, but fairly certain >> I >> wasn't, I speculate why the phase changes did not occur among the birds I >> saw in Cancun. Firstly it's possible the frigatebird colonies on the >> Caribbean side of Mexico simply don't undergo these formations, being a >> slightly different sub-species or what have you. Perhaps, but I >> hypothesize >> that the wind speeds are the primary factor in determining whether >> formation >> phase changes occur. >> >> In Mazatlan last year in late Sept/early October, the wind speeds were >> low, >> I recall. In Cancun, wind speeds were significantly higher. I suggest >> that >> gliding in vee formations can only occur between a certain range of wind >> speed - if wind speed is too low, the birds cannot glide at all; if too >> high, they can glide, but they cannot align in vee formations. The >> critical >> range allows frigate birds to draft when gliding behind another while >> maintaining position, but above the range the drafting effect is too high >> and the birds get "sucked" through - or tend to fall, it looked to me - >> the >> low pressure areas and cannot hold their positions. >> >> Drafting ordinarily has the effect of saving energy (a la cyclists in a >> peloton), but if birds are gliding and already saving substantial energy >> by >> not flapping their wings, I wondered whether any significant energy >> savings >> benefit can be derived by aligning in vee formations while gliding. At >> first I thought not, but gliding inevitably requires some energy - small >> muscle coordination and positional adjustments - not as costly as >> flapping >> wings, but some energy is required. When frigatebirds form vees, I >> hypothesize there is in fact significant energy savings for those birds >> in >> drafting positions - small muscle contractions for positional adjustments >> may be reduced, and birds in these formations will expend less energy. >> They >> would not, I suggest, align in these ways if it were not for some energy >> savings benefit. >> >> Because frigatebirds do not generate the higher air pressure behind which >> to >> draft, such as geese do, or cyclists do, or fish in water do by >> propelling >> themselves through the medium (air or water), I suggest this form of >> energy >> savings constitutes a third type of "drafting". The other is energy >> reduction by huddling, such as penguins undergo. So I suggest three >> types >> of drafting occurrences: >> >> I Occurs when system components generate effective air or >> liquid pressure as they propel themselves through the medium; eg. cyclist >> pelotons, fish schools, geese in vees; >> >> II Occurs when system components remain stationery and air >> or >> liquid pressure is generated externally; eg frigatebirds in vees while >> gliding and remaining more or less positionally stable, and possibly some >> types of fish (here I suggest this may occur in fish swimming upstream, >> such >> as salmon, which may hold themselves in a stationery position against the >> flow of the water - I haven't specifically observed any interesting >> drafting >> formations as a result, although I have watched salmon swim upstream and >> speculate drafting formations do occur) >> >> III Occurs when system components remain stationery and >> environment temperature drops; eg. penguin huddles >> >> Type I exhibit phase changes from disordered states to ordered states and >> back again through hysteresis loops. For cyclists, when peloton speeds >> are >> higher than a critical speed/drafting threshold, disorder in the peloton >> occurs. In a peloton, density is generally higher at low speeds and >> density >> decreases as speeds increase. At a relatively high threshold speed, a >> peloton loses cohesiveness entirely. To resume cohesion, peloton speeds >> must fall to a lower threshold to resume cohesive formations (I've >> observed >> and documented this). The loop is clockwise (speed on Y axis, >> density/order >> on X) , but is the inverse of vehicle traffic hysteresis, for example, >> where >> density increases as speed decreases (note that drafting is not a factor >> in >> traffic). >> >> For frigatebirds, because order increases as windspeed increases to a >> threshold range, above which disorder occurs, wind speeds must only drop >> to >> within the critical range for order to occur again. As a result the >> hysteresis loop may not exist or is not as evident. I tentatively >> speculate >> this windspeed range is approximately equivalent to the magnitude of >> drafting benefit derived when birds are in drafting formations; similarly >> the height of the hysteresis loop in drafting cyclists is related to the >> drafting benefit derived (but may not precisely match it). >> >> So drafting parameter seems to represent a constant that manifests itself >> in >> related but different ways. For example, in Type 1 situations, drafting >> parameter indicates the magnitude of the hysteresis loop; in Type II >> where >> there is no hysteresis, drafting parameter indicates the magnitude of the >> critical range of speeds within which certain formations occur. Drafting >> parameter is thus also a general principle underlying the self-organized >> complex behaviour of a number of different systems. >> >> For Type III (penguin huddles), density/order increases as temperature >> drops >> (requiring greater energy output to remain warm, so a decrease in >> temperature is equivalent to an increase in speed in Type I situations); >> density/order decreases as temperature increases to some threshold, after >> which there is no huddle cohesion. Presumably at some very cold >> temperature >> the huddle cannot generate enough heat and disintegrates by penguins >> freezing to death. In the direction of temperature increase, the >> hysteresis >> loop occurs when disorder occurs at a critical temperature, but must fall >> to >> some lower threshold temperature for the huddle to occur again. >> >> In any event there is a lot more analysis to be made, and I have more to >> say >> even now, but here are a few observations. Basically, my point is that >> through my frigatebird observations, I've identified a third type of >> drafting situation. I had already identified the peloton (which is >> obvious >> and well documented) and huddle situations (which is not as obvious and >> not >> well documented). _____________ >> >> The second, slightly less rigourous observation I made when in Cancun was >> a >> clustering effect among cabs. In Cancun, and likely many parts of Mexico, >> all cabs are required to be of the same colors, so they are all easy to >> spot. There are also many, many cabs in Cancun - it appears about one in >> six vehicles is a taxi. >> >> On the roads, it appeared to me that frequently cab clusters, or several >> cabs near each other, would be driving within two degrees of each other, >> often within one degree. One explanation is that they often originate in >> the same location, many waiting at high person-density locations like the >> airport, the bus station, etc. However, I am not sure this explains the >> clustering on the roads, as cabs leaving from high density locations >> would >> not leave simultaneously when fares are widely distributed in time; they >> also do not have the same destinations. So, clustering must be due to >> something else, I think. >> >> Firstly, cab drivers tend to drive faster than the rest of the traffic, >> especially when they have a fare on board. I am wondering if their fast >> driving and deft abilities at weaving in and out of traffic allows them >> to >> agglomerate at stop lights. As traffic approaches stop lights, the >> slower >> driving traffic still leaves enough space for faster traffic further away >> from the light to slip through and make up a few spaces, even as traffic >> closest to the stop lights slow down and increase density. After a few >> such >> lights, faster traffic "sifts" through to the front, and ends up at the >> front. This is just an idea, and no doubt there are a number of problems >> with it (for example if cabs also tend to go through yellow and red >> lights, >> reducing agglomeration). Nonetheless, if the phenomenon is real - and I >> observed it to occur more often than just chance would seem to explain - >> then there must be a reason for it. >> >> In any event, I would be interested in any input others may have about >> both >> of these subjects. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> ============================================================ >> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv >> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College >> lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org >> >> >> >> > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
I'll be glad to see what further patterns you find. Just to clarify, my
suggestion was not just that the two colonies were different, but that the variation in local colony behavior might be as great as the variation in local environments where colonies are found. If you were to make observations randomly across the range of the species you'd get a better sense of what behaviors are universal and what are local. What you'd want is a work-around, of course, that would be a little less work. Perhaps you could try getting a list of bird watchers in the frigatebird range and randomly calling them to see what they have to say. As to the generality of a "drafting principle", there is at least one major example of it I've given a good bit of study, the formation and evolution of air currents. If you want an example of the vast creativity of local physical processes you might do well to give them a little look. Do all the modeling you like and none of it will produce the degree of intricate and inventive complexity you find in the pathway negotiations taking place around any even mildly warm body like, for example, the one sitting in front of your computer screen right now! Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 7:16 PM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > > > Thanks for all your comments. Next time I'm in Mexico, I will > definitely do > my best to get some video footage. My recollection of what I > saw in October > 2005 in Mazatlan is that the various yaws and compensations > were easy to > see, as you say. I can't remember how long the formations > were stable - > perhaps generally less than a minute, before the formation > would break down > (but I'm really just guessing) - but they were long enough to see the > dynamics involved. And after the formations broke down, they > would often > reform again fairly soon. > > Regarding Phil's comment that the Mazatlan colonies were > possibly just > different from the Cancun colonies I will need to investigate that. > (Frank - I was in Cancun over Christmas, by the way and the > migration habits > might be a factor involved in when and why they engage in vee > formation - > something else to investigate). It seems, though, it is > unlikely that a > single colony in Mazatlan would have developed the vee > formation capacity > completely independently of a colony in Cancun, especially > when the distance > between them is not really that great when we think in terms of bird > migratory habits. So far, I still think the wind conditions > are more likely > what prevented vee formation in Cancun, but of course I will > need a bit more > evidence to support that. > > Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a > factor in vee > formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise > without leaders > to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any > different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize > from some > principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save > energy by > drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because > there is a > physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their > drafting). > > It could be that frigatebird vee formations are simply > derived from their > inherent natural behaviours and have no basis in any > underlying physical > principles, but given the advantages conferred upon other > types of organisms > that engage in drafting dynamics and formations, it seems > reasonable to ask > if there is there is a physical principle underlying the formations. > > Nonetheless, what this all suggests to me that it is an area ripe for > further study, and that very little work has been done to > establish the > universality of the "drafting principle" as I am calling it. > I actually > think it applies in a lot of other situations as well, from > trail formation > to aspects of economics, but that's little more than a gut > feeling at this > point. But I suppose, at the very least, until I can get > some good footage > of frigatebird formations and some wind speed measurements, > we can only > speculate as to what is happening with them. > > I'm not sure when I'll be in Mexico next, but I'll keep > everyone posted as > to what I see. If anyone else is going, please keep an eye > out for the > frigatebirds! Pelicans also fly in vees too, but they are > more like geese, > I think - they fly past at fairly high speed. > > On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really > can't speculate. > I live on the west coast of Canada in British Columbia and I > still see vee > formations going in all directions. But perhaps global > warming is a factor > in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay > farther north > all year round. > > Hugh Trenchard > > |
http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/votacio.phtml?idVideo=3621&tipus=1
Here is a link to a short video which provides a small inkling of the "drafting" behaviour or frigatebirds. It isn't a long enough video to know if the alignment there was more than accidental, nor does it show more than two in alignment, but it's a start. Thanks for the suggestion about contacting bird-watchers in frigatebird territory for a work-around, I'll look into it. Hugh ----- Original Message ----- From: "Phil Henshaw" <[hidden email]> To: "'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'" <friam at redfish.com> Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 9:28 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico I'll be glad to see what further patterns you find. Just to clarify, my suggestion was not just that the two colonies were different, but that the variation in local colony behavior might be as great as the variation in local environments where colonies are found. If you were to make observations randomly across the range of the species you'd get a better sense of what behaviors are universal and what are local. What you'd want is a work-around, of course, that would be a little less work. Perhaps you could try getting a list of bird watchers in the frigatebird range and randomly calling them to see what they have to say. As to the generality of a "drafting principle", there is at least one major example of it I've given a good bit of study, the formation and evolution of air currents. If you want an example of the vast creativity of local physical processes you might do well to give them a little look. Do all the modeling you like and none of it will produce the degree of intricate and inventive complexity you find in the pathway negotiations taking place around any even mildly warm body like, for example, the one sitting in front of your computer screen right now! Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 7:16 PM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > > > Thanks for all your comments. Next time I'm in Mexico, I will > definitely do > my best to get some video footage. My recollection of what I > saw in October > 2005 in Mazatlan is that the various yaws and compensations > were easy to > see, as you say. I can't remember how long the formations > were stable - > perhaps generally less than a minute, before the formation > would break down > (but I'm really just guessing) - but they were long enough to see the > dynamics involved. And after the formations broke down, they > would often > reform again fairly soon. > > Regarding Phil's comment that the Mazatlan colonies were > possibly just > different from the Cancun colonies I will need to investigate that. > (Frank - I was in Cancun over Christmas, by the way and the > migration habits > might be a factor involved in when and why they engage in vee > formation - > something else to investigate). It seems, though, it is > unlikely that a > single colony in Mazatlan would have developed the vee > formation capacity > completely independently of a colony in Cancun, especially > when the distance > between them is not really that great when we think in terms of bird > migratory habits. So far, I still think the wind conditions > are more likely > what prevented vee formation in Cancun, but of course I will > need a bit more > evidence to support that. > > Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a > factor in vee > formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise > without leaders > to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any > different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize > from some > principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save > energy by > drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because > there is a > physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their > drafting). > > It could be that frigatebird vee formations are simply > derived from their > inherent natural behaviours and have no basis in any > underlying physical > principles, but given the advantages conferred upon other > types of organisms > that engage in drafting dynamics and formations, it seems > reasonable to ask > if there is there is a physical principle underlying the formations. > > Nonetheless, what this all suggests to me that it is an area ripe for > further study, and that very little work has been done to > establish the > universality of the "drafting principle" as I am calling it. > I actually > think it applies in a lot of other situations as well, from > trail formation > to aspects of economics, but that's little more than a gut > feeling at this > point. But I suppose, at the very least, until I can get > some good footage > of frigatebird formations and some wind speed measurements, > we can only > speculate as to what is happening with them. > > I'm not sure when I'll be in Mexico next, but I'll keep > everyone posted as > to what I see. If anyone else is going, please keep an eye > out for the > frigatebirds! Pelicans also fly in vees too, but they are > more like geese, > I think - they fly past at fairly high speed. > > On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really > can't speculate. > I live on the west coast of Canada in British Columbia and I > still see vee > formations going in all directions. But perhaps global > warming is a factor > in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay > farther north > all year round. > > Hugh Trenchard > > ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
In reply to this post by Hugh Trenchard
Hugh Trenchard wrote:
> Thanks for all your comments. I just now had a moment to try and catch up with FRIAM and read your thread. As far as drafting goes, I would suggest that there may be some use of wingtip vortices, a normally harmful phenomenon. > Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a factor in vee > formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise without leaders > to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any > different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize from some > principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save energy by > drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because there is a > physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their > drafting). At least with respect to geese, the leadership of the formation changes frequently. > On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really can't speculate. > I live on the west coast of Canada in British Columbia and I still see vee > formations going in all directions. But perhaps global warming is a factor > in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay farther north > all year round. I think the primary driver of the decline of traveling geese is burgeoning population. There now are so many geese that the full population may not be supportable in the northern latitudes, even during summer. I know that I live on what is a major migration path with the winter home of geese about a hundred miles south of ABQ. Right now, we have tens of thousands of geese who have made a permanent home in the central Rio Grande valley, where I live. One interesting aspect of this is that the coyotes in the village of Corrales, my home town, are starting to exhibit cardiac problems from eating too much rich food. -- Ray Parks rcparks at sandia.gov IDART Project Lead Voice:505-844-4024 IORTA Department Mobile:505-238-9359 http://www.sandia.gov/scada Fax:505-844-9641 http://www.sandia.gov/idart Pager:800-690-5288 |
In reply to this post by Hugh Trenchard
That video is very nice for putting it into context. There's an
appearance, for that 10 seconds, that one pair are flying together in locked position and another is in the group mixing positions. Is that what you first meant by the first two parts of "often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without flapping and that they tend to glide in disordered configurations until they spontaneously undergo a phase change"? I was also hoping I could get you to clarify a comment you made about my suggestion that some communities might have more 'leadership' (i.e. social structure). You said "As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise without leaders to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any different for frigatebirds." I would be surprised if you thought self-organization in sand piles and communities of intelligent species happened the same way. Peter described how the birds would be able to physically feel the 'V' formation effect, and I was essentially suggesting that some communities may have stronger group awareness into which that would fit. For much of the instrumental mechanisms of natural system behaviors like these we're left wildly guessing, of course. I just try to balance the shakiness of my foundations for it with my confidence in the conclusions, always looking for the strong foundation of the behavior's particular growth dynamic as an anchor. Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Sunday, January 07, 2007 1:15 PM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video > > > http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/votacio.phtml?idVideo=3621&tipus=1 > > Here is a link to a short video which provides a small inkling of the > "drafting" behaviour or frigatebirds. It isn't a long enough > video to know > if the alignment there was more than accidental, nor does it > show more than > two in alignment, but it's a start. Thanks for the suggestion about > contacting bird-watchers in frigatebird territory for a > work-around, I'll > look into it. > > Hugh > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Phil Henshaw" <sy at synapse9.com> > To: "'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'" > <friam at redfish.com> > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 9:28 PM > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > > > I'll be glad to see what further patterns you find. Just to > clarify, my suggestion was not just that the two colonies > were different, but that the variation in local colony > behavior might be as great as the > variation in local environments where colonies are found. > If you were > to make observations randomly across the range of the species > you'd get a better sense of what behaviors are universal and > what are local. What you'd want is a work-around, of course, > that would be a little less work. Perhaps you could try > getting a list of bird watchers in the frigatebird range and > randomly calling them to see what they have to say. > > As to the generality of a "drafting principle", there is at > least one major example of it I've given a good bit of > study, the formation and evolution of air currents. If you > want an example of the vast creativity of local physical > processes you might do well to give them a > little look. Do all the modeling you like and none of it > will produce > the degree of intricate and inventive complexity you find in > the pathway negotiations taking place around any even mildly > warm body like, for example, the one sitting in front of your > computer screen right now! > > > Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > 680 Ft. Washington Ave > NY NY 10040 > tel: 212-795-4844 > e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com > explorations: www.synapse9.com > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On > > Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 7:16 PM > > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena > while in Mexico > > > > > > Thanks for all your comments. Next time I'm in Mexico, I will > > definitely do my best to get some video footage. My > recollection of > > what I saw in October > > 2005 in Mazatlan is that the various yaws and compensations > > were easy to > > see, as you say. I can't remember how long the formations > > were stable - > > perhaps generally less than a minute, before the formation > > would break down > > (but I'm really just guessing) - but they were long enough > to see the > > dynamics involved. And after the formations broke down, they > > would often > > reform again fairly soon. > > > > Regarding Phil's comment that the Mazatlan colonies were > possibly just > > different from the Cancun colonies I will need to investigate that. > > (Frank - I was in Cancun over Christmas, by the way and the > > migration habits > > might be a factor involved in when and why they engage in vee > > formation - > > something else to investigate). It seems, though, it is > > unlikely that a > > single colony in Mazatlan would have developed the vee > > formation capacity > > completely independently of a colony in Cancun, especially > > when the distance > > between them is not really that great when we think in terms of bird > > migratory habits. So far, I still think the wind conditions > > are more likely > > what prevented vee formation in Cancun, but of course I will > > need a bit more > > evidence to support that. > > > > Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a factor in > > vee formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise > > without leaders > > to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it > would be any > > different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize > > from some > > principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save > > energy by > > drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because > > there is a > > physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their > > drafting). > > > > It could be that frigatebird vee formations are simply derived from > > their inherent natural behaviours and have no basis in any > > underlying physical > > principles, but given the advantages conferred upon other > > types of organisms > > that engage in drafting dynamics and formations, it seems > > reasonable to ask > > if there is there is a physical principle underlying the formations. > > > > Nonetheless, what this all suggests to me that it is an > area ripe for > > further study, and that very little work has been done to establish > > the universality of the "drafting principle" as I am calling it. > > I actually > > think it applies in a lot of other situations as well, from > > trail formation > > to aspects of economics, but that's little more than a gut > > feeling at this > > point. But I suppose, at the very least, until I can get > > some good footage > > of frigatebird formations and some wind speed measurements, > > we can only > > speculate as to what is happening with them. > > > > I'm not sure when I'll be in Mexico next, but I'll keep everyone > > posted as to what I see. If anyone else is going, please > keep an eye > > out for the > > frigatebirds! Pelicans also fly in vees too, but they are > > more like geese, > > I think - they fly past at fairly high speed. > > > > On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really can't > > speculate. I live on the west coast of Canada in British > Columbia and > > I still see vee > > formations going in all directions. But perhaps global > > warming is a factor > > in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay > > farther north > > all year round. > > > > Hugh Trenchard > > > > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > |
Phil, Thanks for the follow up. As Dr. Lissaman says in a subsequent post, that clip by itself may say nothing, but it's only an indication of the type of formations I was referring to, namely a complete vee formation without flapping that I observed (while gliding, and in relatively stationery positions - ie. not moving across the sky at high speed), but not shown in that short video. The "phase change" I referred to would have involved several frigate birds in the formation like the two shown next to each other in the video. By the way, I would say that there may be forms of coupling that go on when two lions on the savannah walk side-by-side. For example their gaits may be synchronized or phase-locked. It would be interesting to see what emergent patterns might arise if you put one hundred globally coupled in that fashion, side-by-side and set them all walking. My thought on the leadership question is that the frigatebirds wouldn't undergo a "phase change" unless there was some energy reduction benefit for them to do so. This would be an evolutionary development and in my mind would apply across species. But as you or someone pointed out, there are ways to confirm that, as I certainly can't state that as a fact. There may be elements of leadership involved, but in my mind any emergent formations are more likely to result from local physical rules, although I can imagine some emergent patterns could arise from a combination of leadership and local physical rules, and there probably are plenty of examples of that. In terms of "physically feeling the vee formation effect", I would argue that they can certainly feel the reduction in energy output required in the most efficient positions, and perhaps are aware of the positions of other birds in their field of view and perhaps have seen other Vees off in the distance, but they end up in their formations because they learned, originally by accident at some stage in their evolutionary development, that there was smaller energy output in certain positions. My point is they could very well not be aware of the global pattern they are forming, just as in a much larger flock, birds will only be aware of their immediate neighbours. >From my experience as a bicycle racer, it's obvious that cyclists can feel the physiological benefits of certain formations, but in a large peloton, the cyclists may easily not be aware of certain pattern formations, which become observable only from the air and upon a closer analysis of their global movements. I agree that we are largely guessing when determining the underlying mechanisms for certain behaviours, but if we can find similar behaviours among different groups, and can identify mechanisms underlying one group, then it is some evidence similar mechanisms apply to the other groups. Not proof obviously, but it is *some* evidence, and it is certainly cause for closer investigation for the curious minded. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Phil Henshaw" <[hidden email]> To: "'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'" <friam at redfish.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 4:55 AM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video That video is very nice for putting it into context. There's an appearance, for that 10 seconds, that one pair are flying together in locked position and another is in the group mixing positions. Is that what you first meant by the first two parts of "often hover and glide for several minutes at a time without flapping and that they tend to glide in disordered configurations until they spontaneously undergo a phase change"? I was also hoping I could get you to clarify a comment you made about my suggestion that some communities might have more 'leadership' (i.e. social structure). You said "As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise without leaders to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it would be any different for frigatebirds." I would be surprised if you thought self-organization in sand piles and communities of intelligent species happened the same way. Peter described how the birds would be able to physically feel the 'V' formation effect, and I was essentially suggesting that some communities may have stronger group awareness into which that would fit. For much of the instrumental mechanisms of natural system behaviors like these we're left wildly guessing, of course. I just try to balance the shakiness of my foundations for it with my confidence in the conclusions, always looking for the strong foundation of the behavior's particular growth dynamic as an anchor. Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Sunday, January 07, 2007 1:15 PM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video > > > http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/votacio.phtml?idVideo=3621&tipus=1 > > Here is a link to a short video which provides a small inkling of the > "drafting" behaviour or frigatebirds. It isn't a long enough > video to know > if the alignment there was more than accidental, nor does it > show more than > two in alignment, but it's a start. Thanks for the suggestion about > contacting bird-watchers in frigatebird territory for a > work-around, I'll > look into it. > > Hugh > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Phil Henshaw" <sy at synapse9.com> > To: "'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'" > <friam at redfish.com> > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 9:28 PM > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena while in Mexico > > > I'll be glad to see what further patterns you find. Just to > clarify, my suggestion was not just that the two colonies > were different, but that the variation in local colony > behavior might be as great as the > variation in local environments where colonies are found. > If you were > to make observations randomly across the range of the species > you'd get a better sense of what behaviors are universal and > what are local. What you'd want is a work-around, of course, > that would be a little less work. Perhaps you could try > getting a list of bird watchers in the frigatebird range and > randomly calling them to see what they have to say. > > As to the generality of a "drafting principle", there is at > least one major example of it I've given a good bit of > study, the formation and evolution of air currents. If you > want an example of the vast creativity of local physical > processes you might do well to give them a > little look. Do all the modeling you like and none of it > will produce > the degree of intricate and inventive complexity you find in > the pathway negotiations taking place around any even mildly > warm body like, for example, the one sitting in front of your > computer screen right now! > > > Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > 680 Ft. Washington Ave > NY NY 10040 > tel: 212-795-4844 > e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com > explorations: www.synapse9.com > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On > > Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > > Sent: Saturday, January 06, 2007 7:16 PM > > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] observations of complex phenomena > while in Mexico > > > > > > Thanks for all your comments. Next time I'm in Mexico, I will > > definitely do my best to get some video footage. My > recollection of > > what I saw in October > > 2005 in Mazatlan is that the various yaws and compensations > > were easy to > > see, as you say. I can't remember how long the formations > > were stable - > > perhaps generally less than a minute, before the formation > > would break down > > (but I'm really just guessing) - but they were long enough > to see the > > dynamics involved. And after the formations broke down, they > > would often > > reform again fairly soon. > > > > Regarding Phil's comment that the Mazatlan colonies were > possibly just > > different from the Cancun colonies I will need to investigate that. > > (Frank - I was in Cancun over Christmas, by the way and the > > migration habits > > might be a factor involved in when and why they engage in vee > > formation - > > something else to investigate). It seems, though, it is > > unlikely that a > > single colony in Mazatlan would have developed the vee > > formation capacity > > completely independently of a colony in Cancun, especially > > when the distance > > between them is not really that great when we think in terms of bird > > migratory habits. So far, I still think the wind conditions > > are more likely > > what prevented vee formation in Cancun, but of course I will > > need a bit more > > evidence to support that. > > > > Also, Phil, I would argue that strong leadership is not a factor in > > vee formations. As we all know, self-organized phenomena arise > > without leaders > > to guide the emergent patterns - I can't think of why it > would be any > > different for frigatebirds. The formations must self-organize > > from some > > principle of interaction - in the case of organisms that save > > energy by > > drafting, it is the coupling between them that occurs because > > there is a > > physiological or energetic advantage to their coupling (ie. to their > > drafting). > > > > It could be that frigatebird vee formations are simply derived from > > their inherent natural behaviours and have no basis in any > > underlying physical > > principles, but given the advantages conferred upon other > > types of organisms > > that engage in drafting dynamics and formations, it seems > > reasonable to ask > > if there is there is a physical principle underlying the formations. > > > > Nonetheless, what this all suggests to me that it is an > area ripe for > > further study, and that very little work has been done to establish > > the universality of the "drafting principle" as I am calling it. > > I actually > > think it applies in a lot of other situations as well, from > > trail formation > > to aspects of economics, but that's little more than a gut > > feeling at this > > point. But I suppose, at the very least, until I can get > > some good footage > > of frigatebird formations and some wind speed measurements, > > we can only > > speculate as to what is happening with them. > > > > I'm not sure when I'll be in Mexico next, but I'll keep everyone > > posted as to what I see. If anyone else is going, please > keep an eye > > out for the > > frigatebirds! Pelicans also fly in vees too, but they are > > more like geese, > > I think - they fly past at fairly high speed. > > > > On the note about the decline of traveling geese, I really can't > > speculate. I live on the west coast of Canada in British > Columbia and > > I still see vee > > formations going in all directions. But perhaps global > > warming is a factor > > in the distances they need to fly now - maybe they can stay > > farther north > > all year round. > > > > Hugh Trenchard > > > > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
Oh yes! It's an important reservation that "they could very well not be
aware of the global pattern they are forming, just as in a much larger flock, birds will [may] only be aware of their immediate neighbours." In evo. bio. the phrase is that "A is random with respect to B". It is quite common for things produced by one mechanism are instrumental to another mechanism which develops quite independently. Most natural systems develop from 'found objects', as it were. Now it's possible in a case like this that the social behavior which makes a bird discover the energy saving groove of 'V' formation flight is partly evolved and recorded in their DNA. Relying on that, though, is like throwing darts at a black hole in my way of thinking, your dart just disappears because it only identifies an assumption. I don't see how in this case, but sometimes you can identify a larger property, like if you saw birds 'dropping in' on a forming 'V' rather than 'shaking out' into the 'V' form. Watching the details of how things happen is often very helpful. Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 2:04 AM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video > > > > Phil, > > Thanks for the follow up. As Dr. Lissaman says in a > subsequent post, that > clip by itself may say nothing, but it's only an indication > of the type of > formations I was referring to, namely a complete vee > formation without > flapping that I observed (while gliding, and in relatively stationery > positions - ie. not moving across the sky at high speed), but > not shown in > that short video. The "phase change" I referred to would > have involved > several frigate birds in the formation like the two shown > next to each other > in the video. > > By the way, I would say that there may be forms of coupling > that go on when > two lions on the savannah walk side-by-side. For example > their gaits may be > synchronized or phase-locked. It would be interesting to see > what emergent > patterns might arise if you put one hundred globally coupled in that > fashion, side-by-side and set them all walking. > > My thought on the leadership question is that the > frigatebirds wouldn't > undergo a "phase change" unless there was some energy > reduction benefit for > them to do so. This would be an evolutionary development and > in my mind > would apply across species. But as you or someone pointed > out, there are > ways to confirm that, as I certainly can't state that as a > fact. There may > be elements of leadership involved, but in my mind any > emergent formations > are more likely to result from local physical rules, although > I can imagine > some emergent patterns could arise from a combination of > leadership and > local physical rules, and there probably are plenty of > examples of that. > > In terms of "physically feeling the vee formation effect", I > would argue > that they can certainly feel the reduction in energy output > required in the > most efficient positions, and perhaps are aware of the > positions of other > birds in their field of view and perhaps have seen other Vees > off in the > distance, but they end up in their formations because they learned, > originally by accident at some stage in their evolutionary > development, that > there was smaller energy output in certain positions. My > point is they > could very well not be aware of the global pattern they are > forming, just as > in a much larger flock, birds will only be aware of their immediate > neighbours. > > >From my experience as a bicycle racer, it's obvious that > cyclists can > >feel > the physiological benefits of certain formations, but in a > large peloton, > the cyclists may easily not be aware of certain pattern > formations, which > become observable only from the air and upon a closer > analysis of their > global movements. > > I agree that we are largely guessing when determining the underlying > mechanisms for certain behaviours, but if we can find similar > behaviours > among different groups, and can identify mechanisms > underlying one group, > then it is some evidence similar mechanisms apply to the > other groups. Not > proof obviously, but it is *some* evidence, and it is > certainly cause for > closer investigation for the curious minded. > > |
Thanks. The only complex group dynamic I can claim any special knowledge of
is a bicycle peloton, and if I apply the "dropping in" effect and the "shaking out" effect, I recognize that a bicycle peloton is both a socialized phenomena and a purely self-organized one. It is also a good example of a dynamic that is both leader-driven and self-organized. An example of "dropping in" occurs when a lone rider sees a peloton of riders ahead, speeds up to catch the group because he knows for a fact that he will save energy by riding with the group. That's a socialized response, because he has learned or been taught that there is energy savings in a group through drafting. Once he is part of the group, the main physical parameters are energy savings by drafting and collision avoidance. Both of these result in continuous positional adjustments within the peloton. A combined physical/social pattern to result is positional rotation within the peloton - physical because riders at the front sometimes become so fatigued that fresh riders behind simply ride past the fatiguing riders, who can then drop into drafting positions to recover; socialized because riders are also taught to trade positions. If we think of the source of the emergent patterns as a ratio of physical to social behaviour, then as riders at the front of the peloton approach their phsysiological thresholds, the ratio of physical/social increases. That is, their fatigue is likely to force a reduction in output so they can recover, while fresher riders behind maintain speed and pass the fatiguing riders. In other words, any speed or power output increases that intitially led to these physiological thresholds may have been leader induced, but once cyclists approach thresholds, then the pure limits of physiology and physics take over. There are many nuances to this analysis of pelotons, but before I get too profuse here, my main point is that your suggestion of a "dropping in" and "shaking out analysis" is very helpful, and I agree there is a lot to be learned from it. By the way - in addition to this discussion, were there any comments on my second main observation in Mexico - the "cab sifting" effect in traffic? Hugh Trenchard ----- Original Message ----- From: "Phil Henshaw" <[hidden email]> To: "'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'" <friam at redfish.com> Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 3:50 AM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video Oh yes! It's an important reservation that "they could very well not be aware of the global pattern they are forming, just as in a much larger flock, birds will [may] only be aware of their immediate neighbours." In evo. bio. the phrase is that "A is random with respect to B". It is quite common for things produced by one mechanism are instrumental to another mechanism which develops quite independently. Most natural systems develop from 'found objects', as it were. Now it's possible in a case like this that the social behavior which makes a bird discover the energy saving groove of 'V' formation flight is partly evolved and recorded in their DNA. Relying on that, though, is like throwing darts at a black hole in my way of thinking, your dart just disappears because it only identifies an assumption. I don't see how in this case, but sometimes you can identify a larger property, like if you saw birds 'dropping in' on a forming 'V' rather than 'shaking out' into the 'V' form. Watching the details of how things happen is often very helpful. Phil Henshaw ????.?? ? `?.???? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 680 Ft. Washington Ave NY NY 10040 tel: 212-795-4844 e-mail: pfh at synapse9.com explorations: www.synapse9.com > -----Original Message----- > From: friam-bounces at redfish.com > [mailto:friam-bounces at redfish.com] On Behalf Of Hugh Trenchard > Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 2:04 AM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: Re: [FRIAM] frigatebirds - short video > > > > Phil, > > Thanks for the follow up. As Dr. Lissaman says in a > subsequent post, that > clip by itself may say nothing, but it's only an indication > of the type of > formations I was referring to, namely a complete vee > formation without > flapping that I observed (while gliding, and in relatively stationery > positions - ie. not moving across the sky at high speed), but > not shown in > that short video. The "phase change" I referred to would > have involved > several frigate birds in the formation like the two shown > next to each other > in the video. > > By the way, I would say that there may be forms of coupling > that go on when > two lions on the savannah walk side-by-side. For example > their gaits may be > synchronized or phase-locked. It would be interesting to see > what emergent > patterns might arise if you put one hundred globally coupled in that > fashion, side-by-side and set them all walking. > > My thought on the leadership question is that the > frigatebirds wouldn't > undergo a "phase change" unless there was some energy > reduction benefit for > them to do so. This would be an evolutionary development and > in my mind > would apply across species. But as you or someone pointed > out, there are > ways to confirm that, as I certainly can't state that as a > fact. There may > be elements of leadership involved, but in my mind any > emergent formations > are more likely to result from local physical rules, although > I can imagine > some emergent patterns could arise from a combination of > leadership and > local physical rules, and there probably are plenty of > examples of that. > > In terms of "physically feeling the vee formation effect", I > would argue > that they can certainly feel the reduction in energy output > required in the > most efficient positions, and perhaps are aware of the > positions of other > birds in their field of view and perhaps have seen other Vees > off in the > distance, but they end up in their formations because they learned, > originally by accident at some stage in their evolutionary > development, that > there was smaller energy output in certain positions. My > point is they > could very well not be aware of the global pattern they are > forming, just as > in a much larger flock, birds will only be aware of their immediate > neighbours. > > >From my experience as a bicycle racer, it's obvious that > cyclists can > >feel > the physiological benefits of certain formations, but in a > large peloton, > the cyclists may easily not be aware of certain pattern > formations, which > become observable only from the air and upon a closer > analysis of their > global movements. > > I agree that we are largely guessing when determining the underlying > mechanisms for certain behaviours, but if we can find similar > behaviours > among different groups, and can identify mechanisms > underlying one group, > then it is some evidence similar mechanisms apply to the > other groups. Not > proof obviously, but it is *some* evidence, and it is > certainly cause for > closer investigation for the curious minded. > > ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
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