Abstract

In densely packed groups demonstrating collective behaviour, such as bird flocks, fish schools or packs of bicycle racers (cycling pelotons), information propagates over a network, with individuals sensing and reacting to stimuli over relatively short space and time scales. What remains elusive is a robust, mechanistic understanding of how sensory system properties affect interactions, information propagation and emergent behaviour. Here, we show through direct observation how the spatio-temporal limits of the human visual sensory system govern local interactions and set the network structure in large, dense collections of cyclists. We found that cyclists align in patterns within a ± 30° arc corresponding to the human near-peripheral visual field, in order to safely accommodate motion perturbations. Furthermore, the group structure changes near the end of the race, suggesting a narrowing of the used field of vision. This change is consistent with established theory in psychology linking increased physical exertion to the decreased field of perception. Our results show how vision, modulated by arousal-dependent neurological effects, sets the local arrangement of cyclists, the mechanisms of interaction and the implicit communication across the group. We furthermore describe information propagation phenomena with an analogous elastic solid mechanics model. We anticipate our mechanistic description will enable a more detailed understanding of the interaction principles for collective behaviour in a variety of animals.

Highlights

  • Large groups of bicycle racers move in dense configurations to conserve energy through aerodynamic drafting

  • For a range of peloton formations, we observe instances of transverse and longitudinal wave types and measure the total wave propagation time tw as a function of the product of simple reaction time to visual stimuli and number of cyclists affected by the wave N, which is plotted in figure 2e

  • Our findings show how interaction principles in dense cycling pelotons are governed by the human visual sensory system

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Summary

Introduction

Self-organized collective behaviour, employed by a range of species including birds [1,2,3,4], insects [5,6,7,8], fish [9,10,11,12,13] and even human crowds [14,15,16,17], is characterized by often remarkable global motion arising from local interindividual interactions [18 –20]. Large groups of bicycle racers move in dense configurations to conserve energy through aerodynamic drafting (typical spacing ( bike length, typical speed %15 m s21). The TdF includes individual goals, team objectives, terrain changes and other variables that result in a range of group dynamics playing out over different temporal and spatial scales [17]. The persistent feature is a densely packed peloton with classifiable global shapes that contains the bulk of the

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