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Honeybee Democracy how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ Tom Seeley Neurobiology & Behavior Cornell University

Honeybee Democracy how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

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Honeybee Democracy how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ. Tom Seeley Neurobiology & Behavior Cornell University. Bert!. Ed!. Portal, Arizona 1974. Estabrook Woods, Massachusetts 1975. Martin Lindauer, Karl von Frisch, and students. KvF. ML. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Honeybee Democracy how a bunch of tiny-brained bees

achieves a high collective IQ

Tom SeeleyNeurobiology &

BehaviorCornell

University

Page 2: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Estabrook Woods, Massachusetts 1975

Portal, Arizona 1974

Bert! Ed!

Page 3: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Forstenrieder Park, Munich ca. 1952

Martin Lindauer, Karl von Frisch, and students

ML KvF

Page 4: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Martin Lindauer, bee observer extraordinaire

Page 5: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

One 16-hour “debate”: 11 sites, 149 scout bees

Seeley and Buhrman (1999) Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 45:19-31.

Page 6: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

One 16-hour “debate”: 11 sites, 149 scout bees

Bees have a democratic process for choosing a

new home!

Page 7: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

How does honeybee democracy work?

1974-1978, 1997-2009(with

collaborators)

Some special tricks of the bees:

1.Decision = reaching a quorum, not a consensus

2.E pluribus unum by means of quorum responses

3.Blending interdependence and independence.

Page 8: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Special Trick #1: Use quorum sensing, not consensus

sensing

Bees build a consensus, but they use it for implementing, not making, their collective

decision

Page 9: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Dynamics on swarm cluster and at nest sites

during swarm decision making

Quorum of scout bees at one site

Consensus among scout bees at swarm

Page 10: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Summary of a swarm’s decision-making process

Page 11: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Decision-making = seeing which option accumulates sufficient

evidence first

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Time

No. of scout bees

Selected nest box

Nonselected nest box

Monkey brain

Bee swarm

Quorum (threshold)

Page 12: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Special Trick # 2: Quickly build a consensus by means

of quorum responses

QR = sharp change in response probability when a threshold

group size is exceeded

probability of

response

Quorum respons

e

Linear respons

e

Sumpter and Pratt (2008) Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 364:743-753.

No. of individuals in group

Page 13: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Two quorum responses that speed up consensus formation

1. Scouts from site with quorum start producing piping signals on swarm. Effects:

-- non-scouts warm up

-- “losing” scouts give up

2. Scouts from site with quorum start producing stop signals on swarm. Effect:

-- scouts advertising losing sites stop dancing (?)

Page 14: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Active inhibition (!) of bees still advertising non-

chosen sites

Consensus formation is accelerated (evidently) by special inhibition

processes

New!

Page 15: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Special Trick # 3: Blending interdependence

and independenceInterdependence: • bees perform dances, share information• recruitment creates positive feedback Independence: • bees don’t slavishly copy dances they follow; make own assessment of site and only then dance (or not)• personal assessment prevents info cascade about inferior site

Page 16: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Variable interdependenc

e,

Full independence

(no mimicking)

High interdependence

(0.8)

Variable independence

(0-1)

List, Elsholtz, and Seeley (2009). Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 364:755-762.

Page 17: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Swarm Smarts (lessons about good group

decision-making)• Use open and free debate: a

powerful means of aggregating info that is dispersed across a group.

• Use quorum sensing: a means of getting the right balance between speed and accuracy.

• Use quorum responses: a means of eventually achieving consensus, if needed.

• Blend public discussion (interdependence) with private evaluation (independence): a means of avoiding amplifications of poor information

Page 18: Honeybee Democracy   how a bunch of tiny-brained bees achieves a high collective IQ

Honeybee Democrac

y

Princeton University Press 2010

Contents

1 Introduction 2 Life in a Honeybee Colony 3 Dream Home for Honeybees 4 Scout Bees’ Debate 5 Agreement on Best Site 6 Building a Consensus 7 Initiating the Move to New Home 8 Steering the Flying Swarm 9 Swarm as Cognitive Entity10 Swarm Smarts

“Second Edition” of my PhD thesis