conference paper
Foraging behavior of fish schools via diffusion adaptation
2010
2nd International Workshop on Cognitive Information Processing
Fish organize themselves into schools as a way to defend against predators and improve foraging efficiency. In this work we develop a model for food foraging and explain how a school of fish can move as a group if every fish were to employ a distributed strategy, known as diffusion adaptation. The algorithm assumes the fish sense the general direction of food and can also infer the general direction of motion of their neighbors. The result indicates that a simple diffusion algorithm can account for the foraging behavior. The study also reveals that some form of communication among the fish is crucial to achieve schooling.
Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Tu, Sheng-Yuan
Date Issued
2010
Publisher
Published in
2nd International Workshop on Cognitive Information Processing
Start page
63
End page
68
Editorial or Peer reviewed
REVIEWED
Written at
OTHER
EPFL units
Event name | Event place | Event date |
Elba Island, Italy | June 14-16, 2010 | |
Available on Infoscience
December 19, 2017
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