Ever notice how ant colonies so successfully explore and exploit resources in the world … to find food at 4th of July picnics, for example? You may find it annoying. But as an ecologist who studies ants and collective behavior, I think it’s intriguing — especially the fact that it’s all done without any central control.
What’s especially remarkable: the close parallels between ant
colonies’ networks and human-engineered ones. One example is
“Anternet”, where we, a group of researchers at Stanford, found
that the algorithm desert ants use to regulate foraging is like
the Traffic Control Protocol (TCP) [updated with correct spelling]
used to regulate data traffic on the internet. Both ant and human
networks use positive feedback: either from acknowledgements that
trigger the transmission of the next data packet, or from
food-laden returning foragers that trigger the exit of another
outgoing forager. [...]
qgl