Lucas P. Saldyt’s research while affiliated with Arizona State University and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 4. The average b AS per second estimated by RFML model (grey line) and the average velocity per second obtained by ABCTracker from experiments (black line) (1 pixel/frame = 4.1 mm s −1 ).
Figure 5. Spatial characteristics of alarm recruitment. Variation in unalarmed ants b AS during the time of approaching their alarmed neighbours. Each point indicates one unalarmed ant. The y-axis shows the variation in b AS during the time the two ants were near each other, and the x-axis shows the minimum distance between the two ants during that time. Unalarmed ants which came closer to alarmed neighbours varied more in their b AS (7.3 pixel = 1 mm). Circles represent observations; curve represents expectations in exponential decay model equation (3.1).
Figure 7. A right-skewed distribution of individual alarm responsiveness. The Lilliefors-corrected K-S test on the alarm responsiveness, indicates observed frequencies are not significantly different from expectations in a geometric distribution (D = 0.33, d.f. = 46, p = 0.12). Bars represent the proportion of observations; curve represents expectations in a geometric distribution.
Decoding alarm signal propagation of seed-harvester ants using automated movement tracking and supervised machine learning
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January 2022

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11 Citations

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Michael R. Lin

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Asma Azizi

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Alarm signal propagation through ant colonies provides an empirically tractable context for analysing information flow through a natural system, with useful insights for network dynamics in other social animals. Here, we develop a methodological approach to track alarm spread within a group of harvester ants, Pogonomyrmex californicus. We initially alarmed three ants and tracked subsequent signal transmission through the colony. Because there was no actual standing threat, the false alarm allowed us to assess amplification and adaptive damping of the collective alarm response. We trained a random forest regression model to quantify alarm behaviour of individual workers from multiple movement features. Our approach translates subjective categorical alarm scores into a reliable, continuous variable. We combined these assessments with automatically tracked proximity data to construct an alarm propagation network. This method enables analyses of spatio-temporal patterns in alarm signal propagation in a group of ants and provides an opportunity to integrate individual and collective alarm response. Using this system, alarm propagation can be manipulated and assessed to ask and answer a wide range of questions related to information and misinformation flow in social networks.

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Citations (1)


... For instance, ants have been shown to exhibit lower levels of aggression when alone versus in a group owing to the need for colony defence [62] or the presence of social cues [60,63]. In a colony setting, the social environment can amplify individual defence based on the social information individuals perceive (e.g. via alarm pheromones [64,65] or non-nestmate cues [66]). Additionally, past work on social insects involved colonies containing individuals of varying ages, genetic backgrounds and/or morphology. ...

Reference:

Division of labour in colony defence in a clonal ant
Decoding alarm signal propagation of seed-harvester ants using automated movement tracking and supervised machine learning