PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior

Summary author: Walter Beckwith

2025-02-27
(Press-News.org) A study of locusts navigating in a novel virtual reality (VR) environment challenges traditional models of collective swarming behavior, researchers report. The findings show that the insects don’t just follow their neighbors like self-propelled particles but instead rely on internal cognitive decision-making processes to navigate as a collective. Collective motion, a phenomenon found widely in nature, has traditionally been described using "self-propelled particle" theoretical models from physics. These “classical” models of collective behavior, like the highly influential Vicsek model, explain how basic local interactions, where individuals align and synchronize their movements with those of nearby members, can give rise to large-scale, coordinated motion within groups. Desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) swarms, which can cover vast areas and contain billions of individuals, serve as a prominent example of collective motion in nature. Using a combination of field experiments and an innovative virtual reality (VR) system in which locust nymphs moved freely, interacting with virtual locusts, while immersed in a 3D virtual environment, Sercan Sayin and collogues show that classical models of collective behavior fail to explain the motion exhibited by swarming locusts. Sayin et al. found that locusts do not follow the fixed interaction rules assumed by traditional models, such as explicitly aligning with their moving neighbors when the density of the swarm increases. Instead, locusts behaved as if they were drawn toward other locusts – a behavior that aligns with a minimal cognitive model of spatiotemporal decision-making where an individual makes directional choices based on their own internal consensus. “Sayin et al. conclude that it is time to move beyond the conception of locusts and other organisms as moving particles behaving according to fixed spatiotemporal rules and to consider organisms as probabilistic decision-makers responding dynamically to their sensory environment,” write Camille Buhl and Stephen Simpson in a related Perspective.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

ACC, AHA issue new acute coronary syndromes guideline

2025-02-27
The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association today released an updated clinical practice guideline for managing individuals experiencing acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The guideline incorporates new evidence and updated recommendations to improve quality of care and outcomes. The 2025 ACC/AHA/ACEP/NAEMSP/SCAI Guideline for the Management of Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes is published simultaneously today in JACC, the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology, and in the American Heart Association’s flagship journal Circulation. ACS includes a ...

Scientists match Earth’s ice age cycles with orbital shifts

Scientists match Earth’s ice age cycles with orbital shifts
2025-02-27
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Beginning around 2.5 million years ago, Earth entered an era marked by successive ice ages and interglacial periods, emerging from the last glaciation around 11,700 years ago. A new analysis suggests the onset of the next ice age could be expected in 10,000 years’ time. An international team, including researchers form UC Santa Barbara, made their prediction based on a new interpretation of the small changes in Earth’s orbit of the sun, which lead to massive shifts in the planet’s climate over periods of thousands of years. The study tracks the natural cycles of the planet’s climate over a period ...

Quantum interference in molecule-surface collisions

Quantum interference in molecule-surface collisions
2025-02-27
The quantum rules shaping molecular collisions are now coming into focus, offering fresh insights for chemistry and materials science. When molecules collide with surfaces, a complex exchange of energy takes place between the molecule and the atoms composing the surface. But beneath this dizzying complexity, quantum mechanics, which celebrates its 100th anniversary this year, governs the process. Quantum interference, in particular, plays a key role. It occurs when different pathways that a molecule can take overlap, resulting ...

Discovery of a common ‘weapon’ used by disease-causing fungi could help engineer more resilient food crops

2025-02-27
The discovery of a powerful “weapon” used by many disease-causing fungi to infect and destroy major food crop staples, such as rice and corn, could offer new strategies to bolster global food security, according to researchers from The Australian National University (ANU) in collaboration with scientists in Germany and the United States.  Like humans, many fungi rely on plants as a food source. This impacts the yield of food crops. It’s estimated farmers lose between 10 to 23 per cent of their crops to fungal disease every year.  The global research team discovered that an enzyme known as a ‘NUDIX hydrolase’ is ...

University of Oklahoma researcher to create new coding language, computing infrastructure

University of Oklahoma researcher to create new coding language, computing infrastructure
2025-02-27
NORMAN, OKLA. – In an increasingly data-saturated world, computing infrastructure innovations are needed to make sense of new types of information. Richard Veras, a professor in the School of Computer Science at the University of Oklahoma, has received a National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) award to develop such an innovation by creating more efficient infrastructure for the computation of sparse and irregular data. Big data – datasets that are challenging to manage using traditional processing tools due to size and complexity, such as social ...

NASA’s Hubble provides bird’s-eye view of Andromeda galaxy’s ecosystem

NASA’s Hubble provides bird’s-eye view of Andromeda galaxy’s ecosystem
2025-02-27
Located 2.5 million light-years away, the majestic Andromeda galaxy appears to the naked eye as a faint, spindle-shaped object roughly the angular size of the full Moon. What backyard observers don't see is a swarm of nearly three dozen small satellite galaxies circling the Andromeda galaxy, like bees around a hive. These satellite galaxies represent a rambunctious galactic "ecosystem" that NASA's Hubble Space Telescope is studying in unprecedented detail. This ambitious Hubble Treasury Program used observations from more than a whopping 1,000 Hubble orbits. Hubble's optical stability, clarity, and efficiency ...

New ocelot chip makes strides in quantum computing

New ocelot chip makes strides in quantum computing
2025-02-27
Scientists based at the AWS Center for Quantum Computing on Caltech's campus have made a leap forward in figuring out how to suppress errors in quantum computers, a pesky problem that continues to be the greatest hurdle to building the machines of the future.   Quantum computers, which are based on the seemingly magical properties of the quantum realm, hold promise for use in many different fields, including medicine, materials science, cryptography, and fundamental physics. But while today's quantum computers can be useful for ...

Computing leaders propose measures to combat tech-facilitated intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation

Computing leaders propose measures to combat tech-facilitated intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation
2025-02-27
The Association for Computing Machinery’s Technology Policy Council (TPC) has announced the publication of “TechBrief: Technology Policy Can Curb Domestic Violence, Human Trafficking, and Crimes Against Children,” a new issue brief which explains how intimate partner violence, human trafficking, and child exploitation are facilitated by computing technologies. The term “tech abuse” pertains to a wide variety of abuse in this context. The ACM policy experts contend that tech abuse is being addressed inconsistently, ...

Sometimes, when competitors collaborate, everybody wins

2025-02-27
CAMBRIDGE, MA – One large metropolis might have several different train systems, from local intercity lines to commuter trains to longer regional lines. When designing a system of train tracks, stations, and schedules in this network, should rail operators assume each entity operates independently, seeking only to maximize its own revenue? Or that they fully cooperate all the time with a joint plan, putting their own interest aside? In the real world, neither assumption is very realistic. Researchers from MIT and ETH Zurich have developed a new planning ...

EU Flagship project DORIAN GRAY to use pioneering AI and avatar technology to uncover links between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to improve healthy ageing and survi

2025-02-27
Key take-aways: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a stage of decline in cognitive function greater than normal for a person’s age and education, not severe enough to impair daily function – but it can progress. Around one third of people with cardiovascular disease (CVD) also have MCI, yet MCI is undiagnosed in 50-80% of these cases. The central aim of the EU’s DORIAN GRAY project is to untangle this MCI-CVD connection, reduce the burden of disease at older ages and prolong survival. Brescia, Italy – 27 February 2025 – A major new project, DORIAN GRAY, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A multidimensional diagnostic approach for COPD

Wearable sensor could be used to monitor OSA treatment response

Waitlist deaths dropped under new lung transplant allocation system

Methotrexate as effective as prednisone in pulmonary sarcoidosis

Waist-to-height ratio predicts heart failure incidence

Climate change increases severity of obstructive sleep apnea

USC, UCLA team up for the world’s first-in-human bladder transplant

Two out of five patients with heart failure do not see a cardiologist even once a year and these patients are more likely to die

AI-enabled ECG algorithm performs well in the early detection of heart failure in Kenya

No cardiac safety concerns reported with a pharmaceutically manufactured cannabidiol formulation

Scientists wash away mystery behind why foams are leakier than expected

TIFRH researchers uncover a mechanism enabling glasses to self-regulate their brittleness

High energy proton accelerator on a table-top — enabled by university class lasers

Life, death and mowing – study reveals Britain’s poetic obsession with the humble lawnmower

Ochsner Transplant Institute’s kidney program achieves ELITE Status

Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes under Medicare Advantage value-based payment

Can mindfulness combat anxiety?

Could personality tests help make bipolar disorder treatment more precise?

Largest genomic study of veterans with metastatic prostate cancer reveals critical insights for precision medicine

UCF’s ‘bridge doctor’ combines imaging, neural network to efficiently evaluate concrete bridges’ safety

Scientists discover key gene impacts liver energy storage, affecting metabolic disease risk

Study finds that individual layers of synthetic materials can collaborate for greater impact

Researchers find elevated levels of mercury in Colorado mountain wetlands

Study reveals healing the ozone hole helps the Southern Ocean take up carbon

Ultra-robust hydrogels with adhesive properties developed using bamboo cellulose-based carbon nanomaterials

New discovery about how acetaminophen works could improve understanding about pain relievers

What genetic changes made us uniquely human? -- The human intelligence evolved from proximal cis-regulatory saltations

How do bio-based amendments address low nutrient use efficiency and crop yield challenges?

Predicting e-bus battery performance in cold climates: a breakthrough in sustainable transit

Enhancing centrifugal compressor performance with ported shroud technology

[Press-News.org] Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior
Summary author: Walter Beckwith