4.7 Article

The visual coupling between neighbours explains local interactions underlying human 'flocking'

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.2089

Keywords

collective behaviour; crowd dynamics; pedestrian dynamics; vision-based model; agent-based model

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Patterns of collective motion in bird flocks, fish schools, and human crowds emerge from local interactions between individuals, which are influenced by visual coupling. This visual model outperforms previous models and explains basic properties of interaction, showing that local interactions underlying human flocking are a natural consequence of the laws of optics.
Patterns of collective motion in bird flocks, fish schools and human crowds are believed to emerge from local interactions between individuals. Most 'flocking' models attribute these local interactions to hypothetical rules or metaphorical forces and assume an omniscient third-person view of the positions and velocities of all individuals in space. We develop a visual model of collective motion in human crowds based on the visual coupling that governs pedestrian interactions from a first-person embedded viewpoint. Specifically, humans control their walking speed and direction by cancelling the average angular velocity and optical expansion/contraction of their neighbours, weighted by visibility (1 - occlusion). We test the model by simulating data from experiments with virtual crowds and real human 'swarms'. The visual model outperforms our previous omniscient model and explains basic properties of interaction: 'repulsion' forces reduce to cancelling optical expansion, 'attraction' forces to cancelling optical contraction and 'alignment' to cancelling the combination of expansion/contraction and angular velocity. Moreover, the neighbourhood of interaction follows from Euclid's Law of perspective and the geometry of occlusion. We conclude that the local interactions underlying human flocking are a natural consequence of the laws of optics. Similar perceptual principles may apply to collective motion in other species.

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