Showing posts from February, 2024Show all
[ Mind on Screen Archive 2010 ] Paquita y todo le demàs by David Moncasi, documentary, Spain Read more »
 F E (DI)2 X A - Fluid Euristic Digital Dispositive for Art by LUISTAR, Italy Read more »
[ 2 art questions ] Ferruccio Gemmellaro, poet and writer, Italy Read more »
thanks for the 1500 visits! @:-) Read more »
[ Mind on Screen Archive] Documentary L' Isola Analogica / The Analogical Island by Francesco Raganato, Italy Read more »
[the Wrong Biennale] U are my probelm Pavillion on The Wrong Biennale's site Read more »
Autism Challenge by Giuseppe Intini, architectural design,  Italy Read more »
[video] Black Box Recorder by Abinadi Meza , USA - Mexico Read more »
[interview] 3 Art questions to Abinadi Meza Read more »
[interview] 3 Art question to Ilaria Pezone Read more »
[web live pavillion event] 25 febbraio UICC'S streaming:  Bansky does New York Read more »
[web live pavillion event] 24 febbraio UICC'S streaming about Bansky :  Exit throught the gift shop Read more »
[web live pavillion event] UICC's streaming: 23th Febbraio: Boom for real The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat by Sara Driver Read more »

[video] Aesthetics of complexity in groups

  Revealing the hidden networks of interaction in mobile animal groups allows prediction of complex... Revealing the hidden networks of interaction in mobile animal groups allows prediction of complex behavioral contagion. Sara Brin Rosenthal et al (2015),  Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Coordination among social animals requires rapid and efficient transfer of information among individuals, which may depend crucially on the underlying structure of the communication network. Establishing the decision-making circuits and networks that give rise to individual behavior has been a central goal of neuroscience. However, the analogous problem of determining the structure of the communication network among organisms that gives rise to coordinated collective behavior, such as is exhibited by schooling fish and flocking birds, has remained almost entirely neglected. Here, we study collective evasion maneuvers, manifested through rapid waves, or cascades, of behavioral change (