TY - JOUR T1 - Collective detection based on visual information in animal groups JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2021.02.18.431380 SP - 2021.02.18.431380 AU - Jacob D. Davidson AU - Matthew M. G. Sosna AU - Colin R. Twomey AU - Vivek H. Sridhar AU - Simon P. Leblanc AU - Iain D. Couzin Y1 - 2021/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2021/02/19/2021.02.18.431380.abstract N2 - The spatio-temporal distribution of individuals within a group (i.e its internal structure) plays a defining role in how individuals interact with their environment, make decisions, and transmit information via social interactions. Group-living organisms across taxa, including many species of fish, birds, ungulates, and insects, use vision as the predominant modality to coordinate their collective behavior. Despite this importance, there have been few quantitative studies examining visual detection capabilities of individuals within groups. We investigate key principles underlying individual, and collective, visual detection of stimuli (which could include cryptic predators, potential food items, etc.) and how this relates to the internal structure of groups. While the individual and collective detection principles are generally applicable, we employ a model experimental system of schooling golden shiner fish (Notemigonus crysoleucas) to relate theory directly to empirical data, using computational reconstruction of the visual fields of all individuals to do so. Our integrative approach allows us to reveal how the external visual information available to each group member depends on the number of individuals in the group, the position within the group, and the location of the external visually-detectable stimulus. We find that in small groups, individuals have detection capability in nearly all directions, while in large groups, occlusion by neighbors causes detection capability to vary with position within the group. We then formulate a simple, and generally applicable, model that captures how visual detection properties emerge due to geometric scaling of the space occupied by the group and occlusion caused by neighbors. We employ these insights to discuss principles that extend beyond our specific system, such as how collective detection depends on individual body shape, and the size and structure of the group.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest. ER -