Flock Logic was developed as an art and engineering project to explore how the feedback laws used to model flocking translate when applied by dancers. The artistic goal was to create choreographic tools that leverage multiagent system dynamics with designed feedback and interaction. The engineering goal was to provide insights and design principles for multiagent systems, such as human crowds, animal groups, and robotic networks, by examining what individual dancers do and what emerges at the group level. We describe our methods to create dance and investigate collective motion. We analyze video of an experiment in which dancers moved according to simple rules of cohesion and repulsion with their neighbors. Using the prescribed interaction protocol and tracked trajectories, we estimate the time-varying graph that defines who is responding to whom. We compute status of nodes in the graph and show the emergence of leaders. We discuss results and further directions.
In the Dance Studio: An Art and Engineering Exploration of Human Flocking
Naomi Ehrich Leonard,G. F. Young,Kelsey Hochgraf,Daniel T. Swain,Aaron Trippe,Willa Chen,Katherine E. Fitch,Susan Marshall
Published 2018 in arXiv.org
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- Publication year
2018
- Venue
arXiv.org
- Publication date
2018-08-22
- Fields of study
Art, Physics, Computer Science, Engineering
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Semantic Scholar
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