Nature's most beautiful performances could inspire the next generation of artificial intelligence

Nature’s most beautiful performances could inspire the next generation of artificial intelligence
The simple three-step process for structural transition in the collective behaviour of groups. Credit: Loughborough University

Scientists have discovered a possible driving force behind some of nature's most beautiful displays paving the way for more complex and autonomous AI.

Researchers wanted to replicate the basic mechanisms behind some of the most highly organized patterns seen in the such as huge swirling starling murmurations and immense twisting herring shoals.

Groups like these, consisting in many cases of hundreds of thousands of individual animals, appear to move as if compelled by a , said lead author Dr. Marco Mazza, a Lecturer in Applied Mathematics, at Loughborough University.

But in reality, could be down to basic survival instincts.

"The beauty of nature has inspired artists, philosophers, and scientists for as long as we can remember," said Dr. Mazza.

"The seemingly effortless harmony in the collective motion of migrating birds, or schooling fish defies explanations.

"Our aim was to obtain a minimal model for general features of self-organization in the natural, or animal, world.

"The principle of 'maximize your options' – a simple, almost trivial ambition—produces complex organizational patterns, known as the Goldstone mode, a concept familiar to physicists working on inanimate matter.

"This Goldstone mode is, in simple terms, how a giant flock of starlings can suddenly change direction collectively as if there were a central brain.

"But in reality, there is no core intelligence driving the behavior."

Dr. Mazza and his co-authors, Hannes Hornischer and Professor Stephan Herminghaus, set up simple computer simulations of groups of particles—mimicking those found in the natural world.

They revealed that , and the appearance of synchronized group behaviors, were created by each individual in the group responding in a simple manner to tiny influences from its closest neighbors.

Nature’s most beautiful performances could inspire the next generation of artificial intelligence
The computer simulation of how particles started in a disordered pattern (a) and reorganised until their goal was achieved (f). Credit: Loughborough University

In the model, each agent (individual) was given one goal—to maximize the future possibilities available to itself.

The resultant ripple of informational shaped the movement and apparent 'behavior' of the group.

When the group reorganized into more complex formations, according to new information, it reassessed itself.

It continued gathering and exchanging information, and then reorganizing, until the goal of maximizing the space around each particle was achieved.

This process, not observed before, could be what drives the collective behavior of large groups of animals, fish and even humans.

In nature, this single goal focus—for example defending against predators—is found in almost all creatures.

Learning more about how living organisms process and react to their environment could help improve artificial intelligence by giving AI systems basic cognitive skills, making them less reliant on human intervention.

Dr. Mazza said: "The current paradigm of AI relies too much on large amounts of data—large neural networks, for example, are greedy for training data.

"Such a strategy might already be showing some limitations. When faced with a new situation, current AI approaches require retraining and specific human intervention that costs time and money.

"A promising way to improve it is to develop methods that are able to process novel information just like organisms with brains do.

"The first step would then be to identify ways of processing information which is open to new inputs and can easily adapt.

"The approach in this publication has this potential because it is inspired by organisms that have adapted to process and resolve new challenges for millions of years of their evolution."

More information: Hannes Hornischer et al. Structural transition in the collective behavior of cognitive agents, Scientific Reports (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-48638-8

Journal information: Scientific Reports
Citation: Nature's most beautiful performances could inspire the next generation of artificial intelligence (2019, September 6) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://techxplore.com/news/2019-09-nature-beautiful-artificial-intelligence.html
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