We address the problem of how individuals can integrate efficiently their private behavior with information provided by others within a group. To this end, we consider the model of collective search introduced in https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.012402, under a minimal setting with no olfactory information. Agents combine a private exploratory behavior and a social imitation consisting in aligning to their neighbors, and weigh the two contributions with a single ``trust" parameter that controls their relative influence. We find that an optimal trust parameter exists even in the absence of olfactory information, as was observed in the original model. Optimality is dictated by the need to explore the minimal region of space that contains the target. An optimal trust parameter emerges from this constraint because it it tunes imitation, which induces a collective mechanism of inertia affecting the size and path of the swarm. We predict the optimal trust parameter for cohesive groups where all agents interact with one another. We show how optimality depends on the initialization of the agents and the unknown location of the target, in close agreement with numerical simulations. Our results may be leveraged to optimize the design of swarm robotics or to understand information integration in organisms with decentralized nervous systems such as cephalopods.
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Francesco Boccardo
Nicola Gigli
Agnese Seminara
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Boccardo et al. (Thu,) studied this question.