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How cognitive and environmental constraints influence the reliability of simulated animats in groups

机译:认知和环境限制如何影响组中模拟动画的可靠性

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Evolving in groups can either enhance or reduce an individual’s task performance. Still, we know little about the factors underlying group performance, which may be reduced to three major dimensions: (a) the individual’s ability to perform a task, (b) the dependency on environmental conditions, and (c) the perception of, and the reaction to, other group members. In our research, we investigated how these dimensions interrelate in simulated evolution experiments using adaptive agents equipped with Markov brains (“animats”). We evolved the animats to perform a spatial-navigation task under various evolutionary setups. The last generation of each evolution simulation was tested across modified conditions to evaluate and compare the animats’ reliability when faced with change. Moreover, the complexity of the evolved Markov brains was assessed based on measures of information integration. We found that, under the right conditions, specialized animats could be as reliable as animats already evolved for the modified tasks, and that reliability across varying group sizes correlated with evolved fitness in most tested evolutionary setups. Our results moreover suggest that balancing the number of individuals in a group may lead to higher reliability but also lower individual performance. Besides, high brain complexity was associated with balanced group sizes and, thus, high reliability under limited sensory capacity. However, additional sensors allowed for even higher reliability across modified environments without a need for complex, integrated Markov brains. Despite complex dependencies between the individual, the group, and the environment, our computational approach provides a way to study reliability in group behavior under controlled conditions. In all, our study revealed that balancing the group size and individual cognitive abilities prevents over-specialization and can help to evolve better reliability under unknown environmental situations.
机译:以团体演变的发展可以增强或减少个人的任务表现。尽管如此,我们仍然知道群体绩效的因素,这可能减少到三个主要尺寸:(a)个人执行任务的能力(b)对环境条件的依赖,以及(c)对和对其他组成员的反应。在我们的研究中,我们调查了如何使用配备马尔可夫大脑(“Animats”)的自适应器材的模拟演化实验中的这些尺寸如何相互关联。我们在各种进化设置下演化了Animats来执行空间导航任务。在修改的条件下测试了每个演化模拟的最后一代,以评估并在面临变化时比较Animats的可靠性。此外,基于信息集成措施评估了进化的马尔可夫大脑的复杂性。我们发现,在合适的条件下,专业的Animats可以像经过改进的任务那样进化的动画一样可靠,并且在大多数测试的进化设置中,不同组尺寸的可靠性与进化的适应性相关。我们的成果介绍,平衡组中的个人数量可能导致更高的可靠性,但也降低了个性化性能。此外,高脑复杂性与平衡群体尺寸有关,因此在有限的感觉能力下具有高可靠性。然而,额外的传感器允许在修改的环境中获得更高的可靠性,而无需复杂的集成马尔可夫大脑。尽管个人,组和环境之间存在复杂的依赖性,但我们的计算方法提供了一种在受控条件下研究组行为的可靠性的方法。总而言之,我们的研究表明,平衡群体规模和个人认知能力可防止过度专业化,并有助于在未知的环境情况下进化更好的可靠性。

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