Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups

This study explores principles of motion based communication in animal and human group behavior. It develops models of cooperative control that involve communication through actions aimed at a shared objective. Moreover, it aims at understanding the collective motion in multi-agent models towards a...

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Main Author: Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15193
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-151932019-01-08T15:37:36Z Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan Mechanical engineering Action-mediated communication Animal collective behavior Communication through motion Human collective motion Milt-agent systems Robot salsa This study explores principles of motion based communication in animal and human group behavior. It develops models of cooperative control that involve communication through actions aimed at a shared objective. Moreover, it aims at understanding the collective motion in multi-agent models towards a desired objective which requires interaction with the environment. In conducting a formal study of these problems, first we investigate the leader-follower interaction in a dance performance. Here, the prototype model is salsa. Salsa is of interest because it is a structured interaction between a leader (usually a male dancer) and a follower (usually a female dancer). Success in a salsa performance depends on how effectively the dance partners communicate with each other using hand, arm and body motion. We construct a mathematical framework in terms of a Dance Motion Description Language (DMDL). This provides a way to specify control protocols for dance moves and to represent every performance as sequences of letters and corresponding motion signals. An enhanced form of salsa (intermediate level) is discussed in which the constraints on the motion transitions are described by simple rules suggested by topological knot theory. It is shown that the proficiency hierarchy in dance is effectively captured by proposed complexity metrics. In order to investigate the group behavior of animals that are reacting to environmental features, we have analyzed a large data set derived from 3-d video recordings of groups of Myotis velifer emerging from a cave. A detailed statistical analysis of large numbers of trajectories indicates that within certain bounds of animal diversity, there appear to be common characteristics of the animals' reactions to features in a clearly defined flight corridor near the mouth of the cave. A set of vision-based motion control primitives is proposed and shown to be effective in synthesizing bat-like flight paths near groups of obstacles. A comparison of synthesized paths and actual bat motions culled from our data set suggests that motions are not based purely on reactions to environmental features. Spatial memory and reactions to the movement of other bats may also play a role. It is argued that most bats employ a hybrid navigation strategy that combines reactions to nearby obstacles and other visual features with some combination of spatial memory and reactions to the motions of other bats. 2016-03-16T14:32:27Z 2016-03-16T14:32:27Z 2015 2016-03-12T07:15:09Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15193 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Mechanical engineering
Action-mediated communication
Animal collective behavior
Communication through motion
Human collective motion
Milt-agent systems
Robot salsa
spellingShingle Mechanical engineering
Action-mediated communication
Animal collective behavior
Communication through motion
Human collective motion
Milt-agent systems
Robot salsa
Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan
Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
description This study explores principles of motion based communication in animal and human group behavior. It develops models of cooperative control that involve communication through actions aimed at a shared objective. Moreover, it aims at understanding the collective motion in multi-agent models towards a desired objective which requires interaction with the environment. In conducting a formal study of these problems, first we investigate the leader-follower interaction in a dance performance. Here, the prototype model is salsa. Salsa is of interest because it is a structured interaction between a leader (usually a male dancer) and a follower (usually a female dancer). Success in a salsa performance depends on how effectively the dance partners communicate with each other using hand, arm and body motion. We construct a mathematical framework in terms of a Dance Motion Description Language (DMDL). This provides a way to specify control protocols for dance moves and to represent every performance as sequences of letters and corresponding motion signals. An enhanced form of salsa (intermediate level) is discussed in which the constraints on the motion transitions are described by simple rules suggested by topological knot theory. It is shown that the proficiency hierarchy in dance is effectively captured by proposed complexity metrics. In order to investigate the group behavior of animals that are reacting to environmental features, we have analyzed a large data set derived from 3-d video recordings of groups of Myotis velifer emerging from a cave. A detailed statistical analysis of large numbers of trajectories indicates that within certain bounds of animal diversity, there appear to be common characteristics of the animals' reactions to features in a clearly defined flight corridor near the mouth of the cave. A set of vision-based motion control primitives is proposed and shown to be effective in synthesizing bat-like flight paths near groups of obstacles. A comparison of synthesized paths and actual bat motions culled from our data set suggests that motions are not based purely on reactions to environmental features. Spatial memory and reactions to the movement of other bats may also play a role. It is argued that most bats employ a hybrid navigation strategy that combines reactions to nearby obstacles and other visual features with some combination of spatial memory and reactions to the motions of other bats.
author Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan
author_facet Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan
author_sort Ozcimder, Hasan Kayhan
title Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
title_short Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
title_full Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
title_fullStr Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
title_full_unstemmed Communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
title_sort communicating through motion in dance and animal groups
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/15193
work_keys_str_mv AT ozcimderhasankayhan communicatingthroughmotionindanceandanimalgroups
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