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Think about all the things that need to happen
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for a human settlement to thrive:
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obtaining food,
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building shelter,
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raising children and more.
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There needs to be a way to divide resources,
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organize major efforts
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and distribute labor efficiently.
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Now imagine having to do this without any sort of planning
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or higher level communication.
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Welcome to the ant colony.
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Ants have some of the most complex social organization
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in the animal kingdom,
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living in structured colonies
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containing different types of members
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who perform specific roles.
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But although this may sound similar to some human societies,
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this organization doesn't arise from any higher level decisions,
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but is part of a biologically programmed cycle.
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In many species,
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all the winged males and winged virgin queens
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from all the nearby colonies in the population
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each leave from their different nests
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and meet at a central place to mate,
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using pheromones to guide each other to a breeding ground.
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After mating, the males die off,
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while females try to establish a new colony.
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The few that are successful settle down in a suitable spot,
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lose their wings,
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and begin laying eggs,
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selectively fertilizing some using stored sperm they've saved up from mating.
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Fertilized eggs grow into female workers
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who care for the queen and her eggs.
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They will then defend the colony
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and forage for food,
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while unfertilized eggs grow into males
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whose only job is to wait until they are ready to leave the nest
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and reproduce, beginning the cycle again.
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So how do worker ants decide what to do and when?
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Well, they don't really.
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Although they have no methods of intentional communication,
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individual ants do interact with one another
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through touch, sound and chemical signals.
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These stimuli accomplish many things
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from serving as an alarm to other ants if one is killed,
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to signaling when a queen is nearing the end of her reproductive life.
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But one of the most impressive collective capabilities of an ant colony
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is to thoroughly and efficiently explore large areas
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without any predetermined plan.
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Most species of ants have little or no sense of sight
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and can only smell things in their vicinity.
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Combined with their lack of high level coordination,
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this would seem to make them terrible explorers,
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but there is an amazingly simple way
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that ants maximize their searching efficiency;
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by changing their movement patterns
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based on individual interactions.
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When two ants meet,
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they sense each other by touching antennae.
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If there are many ants in a small area this will happen more often
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causing them to respond by moving
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in more convoluted, random paths in order to search more thoroughly.
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But in a larger area, with less ants, where such meetings happen less often,
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they can walk in straight lines to cover more ground.
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While exploring their environment in this way,
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an ant may come across any number of things,
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from threats or enemies, to alternate nesting sites.
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And some species have another capability known as recruitment.
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When one of these ants happens to find food,
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it will return with it, marking its path with a chemical scent.
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Other ants will then follow this pheromone trail,
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renewing it each time they manage to find food and return.
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Once the food in that spot is depleted,
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the ants stop marking their return.
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The scent dissipates and ants are no longer attracted to that path.
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These seemingly crude methods of search and retrieval
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are, in fact, so useful that they are applied in computer models
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to obtain optimal solutions from decentralized elements,
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working randomly and exchanging simple information.
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This has many theoretical and practical applications,
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from solving the famous traveling salesman problem,
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to scheduling computing tasks and optimizing Internet searches,
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to enabling groups of robots to search a minefield
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or a burning building collectively, without any central control.
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But you can observe these fascinatingly simple, yet effective, processes directly
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through some simple experiments,
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by allowing ants to enter empty spaces of various sizes
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and paying attention to their behavior.
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Ants may not be able to vote, hold meetings or even make any plans,
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but we humans may still be able to learn something
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from the way that such simple creatures
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are able to function so effectively in such complex ways.