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Honey Bee Waggle Dance as a Model of Swarm Intelligence

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JOURNAL OF ROBOTICS AND MECHATRONICS
卷 35, 期 4, 页码 901-910

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FUJI TECHNOLOGY PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.20965/jrm.2023.p0901

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social behavior; waggle dance; information transfer; collective foraging

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Honey bees form large colonies and work together to maintain the colony's activity, including foraging for food. They communicate the location of food sources through waggle dances, allowing for efficient food collection. The presence of errors in these dance behaviors is crucial in adapting to changing environments.
Honey bees are social insects that form colonies (hives), which often consist of more than 10,000 individuals. In a colony, bees allocate jobs (division of labor) and work cooperatively and intelligently to maintain the colony's activity, such as nursing broods, cleaning, and guarding against enemies. Among worker bees, only forager bees collect food, and success in finding food directly influences colony survival. For more efficient foraging, honey bees share location information pertaining to profitable food sources through specific behavior called waggle dances. During such dances, the direction and distance from the hive to the food source are encoded as body movements. Other foragers follow the dancing bees and receive location information. Some of these bees then fly to the advertised location to find the food source. Some of these recruited bees subsequently dance to recruit new bees. This process is then repeated. Consequently, many foragers visit the food source, and a colony can rapidly and flexibly collect large amounts of food even in foraging environment that can suddenly change (e.g., flowers disappear or nectar flux increases/decreases). To achieve effective food collection through the waggle dance, the behavior of both the dancers and followers probably contains information for an implementation of swarm intelligence. In this review, we introduce the properties of dance behavior at the levels of dancers, followers, and colonies. We found that errors in waggle dance information play an important role in adaptive foraging in dynamically changing environments.

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