首页 /研究 /Elongating, entwining, and dragging: mechanism for adaptive locomotion of tubificine worm blobs in a confined environment
SWARM

Elongating, entwining, and dragging: mechanism for adaptive locomotion of tubificine worm blobs in a confined environment

Taishi Mikami, Daiki Wakita, Ryo Kobayashi, Akio Ishiguro, Takeshi Kano

发表年份
2023
引用次数
3
访问权限
开放获取

摘要

Worms often aggregate through physical connections and exhibit remarkable functions such as efficient migration, survival under environmental changes, and defense against predators. In particular, entangled blobs demonstrate versatile behaviors for their survival; they form spherical blobs and migrate collectively by flexibly changing their shape in response to the environment. In contrast to previous studies on the collective behavior of worm blobs that focused on locomotion in a flat environment, we investigated the mechanisms underlying their adaptive motion in confined environments, focusing on tubificine worm collectives. We first performed several behavioral experiments to observe the aggregation process, collective response to aversive stimuli, the motion of a few worms, and blob motion in confined spaces with and without pegs. We found the blob deformed and passed through a narrow passage using environmental heterogeneities. Based on these behavioral findings, we constructed a simple two-dimensional agent-based model wherein the flexible body of a worm was described as a cross-shaped agent that could deform, rotate, and translate. The simulations demonstrated that the behavioral findings were well-reproduced. Our findings aid in understanding how physical interactions contribute to generating adaptive collective behaviors in real-world environments as well as in designing novel swarm robotic systems consisting of soft agents.

关键词

Computer scienceCollective motionMotion (physics)Process (computing)Adaptive behaviorAggregate (composite)Adaptation (eye)Mechanism (biology)Swarm behaviourCollective behavior

相关论文

查看 SWARM 分类全部论文