3.8 Article

Understanding of superorganisms: collective behavior, differentiation and social organization

Journal

ARTIFICIAL LIFE AND ROBOTICS
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 204-212

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10015-022-00754-x

Keywords

Bryozoa; Caste; Colonial animal; Differentiation; Naked mole-rat; Robotics; Self-organization; Superorganism; Termite

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This article introduces the life patterns and recent research advances of superorganisms, explores the regulatory mechanisms of superorganism systems and animal species with unique developmental systems. It also discusses synthetic approaches based on robotics and mathematical modeling.
Most animal species spend their lives in a form based on the unit of an individual that is a sophisticated multicellular closed unit with various biological functions. Although the system of an animal individual seems to be perfect, individuals belonging to some animal lineages constitute higher-dimensional units, i.e., colonies, that consist of multiple individuals of the same species, performing divisions of labors among them. Those animals include eusocial insects and colonial animals, and their colonies are also known as superorganisms, since a colony behave as a single individual. Recent molecular and genomic/transcriptomic studies have been revealing the regulatory mechanisms underlying the integrated systems of superorganisms although many aspects have yet to be elucidated. In this article, life patterns of superorganisms in some animals are introduced, together with recent research advances on the mechanisms. Furthermore, animal species that show distinctive developmental systems such as abnormal asexual reproduction are also focused, since those developmental patterns are deviated from the concept of normal animal individuality. Furthermore, synthetic approaches based on robotics and mathematical modeling, focusing on novel robotic systems that can self-organize various non-trivial macroscopic functionalities as observed in superorganisms, are also discussed.

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