Gravish Nick, Gold Gregory, Zangwill Andrew, Goodisman Michael A D, Goldman Daniel I
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA.
Soft Matter. 2015 Sep 7;11(33):6552-61. doi: 10.1039/c5sm00693g.
The collective movement of animal groups often occurs in confined spaces. As animal groups are challenged to move at high density, their mobility dynamics may resemble the flow of densely packed non-living soft materials such as colloids, grains, or polymers. However, unlike inert soft-materials, self-propelled collective living systems often display social interactions whose influence on collective mobility are only now being explored. In this paper, we study the mobility of bi-directional traffic flow in a social insect (the fire ant Solenopsis invicta) as we vary the diameter of confining foraging tunnels. In all tunnel diameters, we observe the emergence of spatially heterogeneous regions of fast and slow traffic that are induced through two phenomena: physical obstruction, arising from the inability of individual ants to interpenetrate, and time-delay resulting from social interaction in which ants stop to briefly antennate. Density correlation functions reveal that the relaxation dynamics of high density traffic fluctuations scale linearly with fluctuation size and are sensitive to tunnel diameter. We separate the roles of physical obstruction and social interactions in traffic flow using cellular automata based simulation. Social interaction between ants is modeled as a dwell time (Tint) over which interacting ants remain stationary in the tunnel. Investigation over a range of densities and Tint reveals that the slowing dynamics of collective motion in social living systems are consistent with dynamics near a fragile glass transition in inert soft-matter systems. In particular, flow is relatively insensitive to density until a critical density is reached. As social interaction affinity is increased (increasing Tint) traffic dynamics change and resemble a strong glass transition. Thus, social interactions play an important role in the mobility of collective living systems at high density. Our experiments and model demonstrate that the concepts of soft-matter physics aid understanding of the mobility of collective living systems, and motivate further inquiry into the dynamics of densely confined social living systems.
动物群体的集体运动通常发生在有限的空间内。由于动物群体面临着在高密度下移动的挑战,它们的移动动态可能类似于诸如胶体、颗粒或聚合物等密集堆积的非生物软材料的流动。然而,与惰性软材料不同,自我推进的集体生命系统通常表现出社会互动,而这种互动对集体移动性的影响直到现在才开始被探索。在本文中,我们研究了社会昆虫(红火蚁Solenopsis invicta)中双向交通流的移动性,我们改变了限制觅食隧道的直径。在所有隧道直径下,我们观察到通过两种现象诱导出了快速和慢速交通的空间异质区域:物理阻碍,这是由于单个蚂蚁无法相互穿透而产生的;以及社会互动导致的时间延迟,在这种互动中蚂蚁会停下来短暂地触角接触。密度相关函数表明,高密度交通波动的弛豫动态与波动大小呈线性比例关系,并且对隧道直径敏感。我们使用基于细胞自动机的模拟来区分物理阻碍和社会互动在交通流中的作用。蚂蚁之间的社会互动被建模为一个停留时间(Tint),在此期间相互作用的蚂蚁在隧道中保持静止。对一系列密度和Tint的研究表明,社会生命系统中集体运动的减速动态与惰性软物质系统中接近脆弱玻璃化转变的动态一致。特别是,在达到临界密度之前,流动对密度相对不敏感。随着社会互动亲和力的增加(增加Tint),交通动态发生变化,类似于强烈的玻璃化转变。因此,社会互动在高密度下集体生命系统的移动性中起着重要作用。我们的实验和模型表明,软物质物理学的概念有助于理解集体生命系统的移动性,并激发对密集受限社会生命系统动态的进一步探究。