Month: February 2026

Iain Couzin: The Geometry of Decision-Making in Networked Biological Systems

Network Science Colloquium Series, 09/24/2025

In 1905 the biologist Edmund Selous wrote of his wonderment when observing a flock of starlings flying overhead “they circle; now dense like a polished roof, now disseminated like the meshes of some vast all-heaven-sweeping net…wheeling, rending, darting…a madness in the sky”. He went on to speculate “They must think collectively, all at the same time, or at least in streaks or patches — a square yard or so of an idea, a flash out of so many brains”. Today, we still know relatively little about how the network of social interactions connect brains—and thus how sensing and information processing arises in such organismal collectives. Employing automated tracking, computational reconstruction of sensory information, and immersive ‘holographic’ virtual reality (VR) experiments, I will discuss newly-discovered geometric principles of collective decision-making that occur across scales of biological organization; from neural networks to the social networks of animal groups. I will also show how this finding can impact humans, including how it can be translated to highly effective control laws for swarming robots, as well as how it has transformed our understanding of locust swarms, one of the most destructive natural phenomena on Earth.

Watch at: www.youtube.com

Self-Organizing Railway Traffic Management

Federico Naldini, Fabio Oddi, Leo D’Amato, Grégory Marlière, Vito Trianni, Paola Pellegrini
Improving traffic management in case of perturbation is one of the main challenges in today’s railway research. The great majority of the existing literature proposes approaches to make centralized decisions to minimize delay propagation. In this paper, we propose a new paradigm to the same aim: we design and implement a modular process to allow trains to self-organize. This process consists in having trains identifying their neighbors, formulating traffic management hypotheses, checking their compatibility and selecting the best ones through a consensus mechanism. Finally, these hypotheses are merged into a directly applicable traffic plan. In a thorough experimental analysis on a portion of the Italian network, we compare the results of self-organization with those of a state-of-the-art centralized approach. In particular, we make this comparison mimicking a realistic deployment thanks to a closed-loop framework including a microscopic railway simulator. The results indicate that self-organization achieves better results than the centralized algorithm, specifically thanks to the definition and exploitation of the instance decomposition allowed by the proposed approach.

Read the full article at: arxiv.org

The meaning of life in a universe whose ultimate origins are unknown

John E. Stewart

BioSystems Volume 262, April 2026, 105733

Our universe appears to be fine-tuned for life. But once life emerges, it does not evolve randomly. Evolution has a trajectory. Both evolvability and cooperative integration increase as evolution proceeds. Until now, this trajectory has largely been driven blindly by gene-based natural selection. But humans are developing cognitive capacities that are far superior than natural selection at adapting and evolving humanity. These capacities will enable humanity to use an understanding of evolution’s future trajectory to guide its own evolution, avoiding the destructive selection that will otherwise reinforce the trajectory. Humans who help realize this potential will be fulfilling vital evolutionary roles that are meaningful and purposeful in a much larger scheme of things. The paper considers whether these roles remain meaningful when considered in the wider context of possible origins of the universe. But this analysis is faced with a potentially infinite number of origin hypotheses (including innumerable ‘God hypotheses’), which are not falsified by current knowledge. The paper addresses this challenge using methods that enable rational decision-making despite radical uncertainty. Broadly, this approach reinforces the conclusions reached by consideration of the evolutionary trajectory within the universe, and opens some new possibilities. Finally, the paper demonstrates that extending this analysis also largely overcomes Hume’s critique of induction, placing scientific methodologies on a firmer footing. It achieves this by recognising that a universe which exhibits a trajectory towards increasing evolvability must contain discoverable regularities that provide adaptive advantages for evolvability.

Read the full article at: www.sciencedirect.com

Elections – yrCSS

The yrCSS Advisory Board is composed of six members and is partially renewed every year. This year, there are three vacant places with a mandate of two years. We are therefore looking for motivated early-career researchers who wish to be a part of the Advisory Board. Please, consider applying and/or spreading this call.

Application deadline: February 28th

Voting: March 1-15th

More at: yrcss.cssociety.org

Mechanistic interplay between information spreading and opinion polarization

Kleber Andrade Oliveira , Henrique Ferraz de Arruda , Yamir Moreno 

PNAS Nexus, Volume 5, Issue 1, January 2026, pgaf402

We investigate how information-spreading mechanisms affect opinion dynamics and vice versa via an agent-based simulation on adaptive social networks. First, we characterize the impact of reposting on user behavior with limited memory, a feature that introduces novel system states. Then, we build an experiment mimicking information-limiting environments seen on social media platforms and study how the model parameters can determine the configuration of opinions. In this scenario, different posting behaviors may sustain polarization or reverse it. We further show the adaptability of the model by calibrating it to reproduce the statistical organization of information cascades as seen empirically in a microblogging social media platform. Our model combines mechanisms for platform content recommendation, connection rewiring, and limited-attention user behavior, paving the way for a robust understanding of echo chambers as a specialized phenomenon of opinion polarization.

Read the full article at: academic.oup.com