The collective motion of animal groups often exhibits velocity-velocity correlations between nearest neighbours, with the strongest velocity correlations observed at the shortest inter-animal spacings. This may have been a motivational factor in the development of models based primarily on short-ranged interactions. Here we ask whether such observations necessarily mean that the interactions are short-ranged. We develop a minimal model of collective motion capable of supporting interactions of arbitrary range and show that it represents a counterexample: the strongest velocity correlations emerge at the shortest distances, even when the interactions are explicitly non-local.
CITATION STYLE
King, A. E. B. T., & Turner, M. S. (2021). Non-local interactions in collective motion. Royal Society Open Science, 8(3). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201536
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