基于计算拓扑的蜜蜂聚集时空分析技术

Golnar Gharooni-Fard, Morgan Byers, Varad Deshmukh, Elizabeth Bradley, Carissa Mayo, Chad M. Topaz, Orit Peleg
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摘要

理解集体行为的一个主要挑战是描述群体的时空动态。我们采用拓扑数据分析来探索蜜蜂聚集的结构,这种聚集是在巢友之间直接交换食物时形成的。根据蜜蜂个体的位置,我们建立了名为 CROCKER 矩阵的拓扑总结,以追踪蜂群形态与规模和时间的函数关系。CROCKER 矩阵的每一列都记录了在给定的时间点上,在一定的分析尺度范围内,数据中存在的拓扑特征的数量,如组件或孔洞的数量。为了从这些信息中检测出群体形态的重要变化,我们首先对这些矩阵应用了降维技术,然后在得到的标量数据上使用了经典的聚类和变化点检测算法。这种方法在基于代理的蜜蜂模型的合成数据上进行了测试,结果显示了两个不同的阶段:在引入食物之前的分散阶段,以及随后形成聚集的食物交换阶段。然后,我们转而使用实验室数据,成功地在多个实验中检测到了相同的两个阶段。有趣的是,我们的方法在实验接近尾声时发现了另一个阶段的变化,这表明在食物交换阶段之后可能会出现另一个分散阶段。
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A computational topology-based spatiotemporal analysis technique for honeybee aggregation
A primary challenge in understanding collective behavior is characterizing the spatiotemporal dynamics of the group. We employ topological data analysis to explore the structure of honeybee aggregations that form during trophallaxis, which is the direct exchange of food among nestmates. From the positions of individual bees, we build topological summaries called CROCKER matrices to track the morphology of the group as a function of scale and time. Each column of a CROCKER matrix records the number of topological features, such as the number of components or holes, that exist in the data for a range of analysis scales, at a given point in time. To detect important changes in the morphology of the group from this information, we first apply dimensionality reduction techniques to these matrices and then use classic clustering and change-point detection algorithms on the resulting scalar data. A test of this methodology on synthetic data from an agent-based model of honeybees and their trophallaxis behavior shows two distinct phases: a dispersed phase that occurs before food is introduced, followed by a food-exchange phase during which aggregations form. We then move to laboratory data, successfully detecting the same two phases across multiple experiments. Interestingly, our method reveals an additional phase change towards the end of the experiments, suggesting the possibility of another dispersed phase that follows the food-exchange phase.
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