Does diversity deliver? How variation in individual knowledge and behavioural traits impact on the performance of animal groups

Lead Research Organisation: Swansea University
Department Name: College of Science

Abstract

Have you ever been stood with a group of friends (or worse, colleagues) in an unfamiliar city trying to choose which restaurant to dine at? I expect so, but do you remember how you made your choice, all the while trying to stick together and not lose one another? There are a number of ways you could have arrived at your decision. You may have followed the decision of the group member who set-off purposefully down the High Street, or you all may have agreed to go to the restaurant declared 'the best in town' by the person with local knowledge of the city. Such situations are just as common in the animal world. Swap 'restaurant' to 'foraging patch' and we have a description for the type of foraging decisions faced by almost all social animals, every day of their lives. But these are not trivial decisions; a number of consecutive bad choices-where a group are led to poor foraging areas, or risky habitats-can be fatal. Such decisions are made even more difficult where animals face unexpected dangers or an environment which is constantly changing, something all animals are increasingly encountering in our rapidly changing world. One way animal groups may cope with uncertainty-and perform well in such environments-is by drawing upon one another's particular expertise or information, or having individuals bold enough to try out new options. For instance, we know that summing information possessed by individual group-members can increase the collective cognition of groups, a concept which has attracted much attention in the media and been termed 'the wisdom of crowds'. Larger and/or more diverse groups may also contain individuals with different skills and experiences, which increase the chances of a group solving a given task. But to date, studies that explicitly investigate the effect of such diversity on group performance have so far been restricted to human teams acting for financial gain, and have produced mixed results. In the proposed fellowship, I will use a combination of experimental and theoretical data to test the hypothesis that 'diversity delivers' in a group setting, and ask: What makes a winning team? To answer this question, I will present highly gregarious freshwater fish, the nine-spined stickleback, with a series of problems not unlike the 'which restaurant?' example I used in my opening sentences. Combining highly sophisticated video tracking of individual fishes movements, with foraging devices made using kitchen egg-timers and laboratory petri dishes, I will explore the role of variability in individual knowledge and personality. Questions I will tackle will include: If the most informed individual in a group is also the boldest in the group, does the group make more accurate decisions as a consequence of following this bold individual's choices? If a group is composed of a majority of poorly informed bold individuals and a minority of well-informed shy individuals, is the group able to utilise the information possessed by the latter? How different does a groups information or personality composition have to be before they cannot agree on a place to forage, and split up? The unique experimental set-up proposed will also allow me to measure the actual benefit to individual fish (in terms of amount of food eaten) in these different contexts. All of these experiments will take place with groups of just five fish, given the time needed to individually assess individual personality and train fish to different levels of 'expertise'. However, I will then use a series of computer simulations based on what I find in these experiments to make predictions about the outcome where shoals of fifty or a hundred individuals are concerned, which I will then test in the laboratory. Overall, this project will be the first attempt to manipulate the distribution of both information and personality within groups, and will provide a new insight into the function of diversity for social animals when coping with uncertainty.

Publications

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Georgopoulou DG (2022) Emergence and repeatability of leadership and coordinated motion in fish shoals. in Behavioral ecology : official journal of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology

 
Description This project explored how diversity within social groups, and how this affects group structure and functioning, primarily using three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) as a model system. We found that inter-individual differences in stickleback behaviour was repeatable over many months (King et al. 2013). It has been proposed that such variation in personality could be functionally related to cognition, and we tested this. Bolder sticklebacks (who tend to be male) were found to make faster decisions than their shyer conspecifics. However, boldness was not related to decision accuracy (Mamuneas et al. 2015). This suggests that although bolder fish may acquire information more quickly because they make decisions faster, they do not differ from shyer conspecifics in their decision-making accuracy (Mamuneas et al. 2015). We found that fish with different personalities are equally 'flexible' in their response to changes in predation pressure, suggesting individuals are not constrained by their personalities in their ability to cope with a potentially harmful threat (Fürtbauer et al. 2016). We also explored social foraging dynamics of shoals sticklebacks and found that fish's allocation to alternative foraging tactics (i.e. finding or joining behaviour) can be explained by environmental quality (Hansen et al. 2016). We explored similar questions in birds (King et al. 2015), and humans (King et al. 2015) during the Fellowship.
Exploitation Route These findings provide new insights for the development of more sophisticated models of human collective behaviour that consider different networks for communication (e.g. visual and vocal) that have the potential to operate simultaneously in cooperative contexts.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

URL https://www.shoalgroup.org/publication-list
 
Description My research tackled a fundamentally important issue to the success or failure of groups under uncertainty. Using the biological principles that emerged from this research I worked with AXA Insurance company - who employ 157,000 people in 57 countries serving 102 million clients - to explore "what makes a 21st Century Leader". This culminated in me giving the opening talk of AXA Insurance's Annual Meeting (2012) in Berlin, Germany, attended by their 50 top Directors. My research has led to knowledge exchange with research users in the City of Cape Town, South Africa has contributed to the City's Baboon Management Strategy (specifically on baboon-human conflict) and resulted in changes to the way the Council managed the local baboon population. This work features as a Case Study in NERC's Impact Database (reference SID0393). Public Engagement Events at University Open Days, where nearly 1200 participants undertook real-time scientific experiments on the topics of "what makes a winning team?". These activities resulted in a scientific publication (King et al. [2012] Biology Letters 8: 197-200), and the work was covered by award-winning British science writer Ed Yong in Discover Magazine. I also gave public talks as part of the 2013 'Swansea Science Cafe' at the Dylan Thomas Centre, Swansea, and at the 2014 Cheltenham Science Festival as part of the event "Animal Behaviour and Intelligence" with BBC Bang Goes the Theory TV presenter Liz Bonnin. In October this year I will co-organise an event at the National Science Museum. Active engagement with the press has resulted in coverage by International newspapers (e.g. The Daily Telegraph, The LA Times), magazines (e.g. The Economist, Scientific American, New Scientist), and TV and Radio (e.g. on BBC national news and on over 15 radio stations for interviews in 2013/14).
Sector Communities and Social Services/Policy,Education,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Societal,Economic