Individuality in risk-tolerance and learning effects in non-steady locomotion of guinea fowl

From Ilya Nemenman: Theoretical Biophysics @ Emory
Revision as of 23:11, 26 February 2020 by Ilya (talk | contribs) (Created page with "by '''Monica Daley''', UC Irvine ;Abstract :We are interested in how animals adapt their locomotor strategies over short and long timescales to balance multiple task-level pe...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

by Monica Daley, UC Irvine

Abstract
We are interested in how animals adapt their locomotor strategies over short and long timescales to balance multiple task-level performance demands, such as speed, economy, stability and injury avoidance. Our recent study of turning maneuvers suggests that individual variation in non-steady locomotor behavior is strongly correlated with bold-shy personality expression, an indicator of risk-taking propensity. Shy individuals run slowly but fall rarely, whereas bold-individuals run faster but fall more frequently. We are currently developing a theoretical framework that includes probabilistic risk models and individual variation in risk perception and acceptable risk tolerance to predict path planning and maneuvering strategies in non-steady locomotor tasks.