How do schools of fish swim in harmony? - Nathan S. Jacobs

688,618 views ・ 2016-03-31

TED-Ed


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How do schools of fish swim in harmony?
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And how do the tiny cells in your brain give rise to the complex thoughts,
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memories,
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and consciousness that are you?
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Oddly enough, those questions have the same general answer:
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emergence,
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or the spontaneous creation of sophisticated behaviors and functions
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from large groups of simple elements.
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Like many animals, fish stick together in groups,
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but that's not just because they enjoy each other's company.
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It's a matter of survival.
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Schools of fish exhibit complex swarming behaviors
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that help them evade hungry predators,
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while a lone fish is quickly singled out as easy prey.
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So which brilliant fish leader is the one in charge?
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Actually, no one is,
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and everyone is.
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So what does that mean?
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While the school of fish is elegantly twisting, turning, and dodging sharks
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in what looks like deliberate coordination,
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each individual fish is actually just following two basic rules
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that have nothing to do with the shark:
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one, stay close, but not too close to your neighbor,
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and two, keep swimmming.
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As individuals, the fish are focused on the minutiae of these local interactions,
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but if enough fish join the group, something remarkable happens.
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The movement of individual fish is eclipsed by an entirely new entity:
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the school, which has its own unique set of behaviors.
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The school isn't controlled by any single fish.
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It simply emerges if you have enough fish following the right set of local rules.
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It's like an accident that happens over and over again,
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allowing fish all across the ocean to reliably avoid predation.
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And it's not just fish.
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Emergence is a basic property of many complex systems of interacting elements.
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For example, the specific way in which millions of grains of sand
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collide and tumble over each other
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almost always produces the same basic pattern of ripples.
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And when moisture freezes in the atmosphere,
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the specific binding properties of water molecules
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reliably produce radiating lattices that form into beautiful snowflakes.
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What makes emergence so complex
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is that you can't understand it by simply taking it apart,
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like the engine of a car.
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Taking things apart is a good first step to understanding a complex system.
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But if you reduce a school of fish to individuals,
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it loses the ability to evade predators,
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and there's nothing left to study.
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And if you reduce the brain to individual neurons,
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you're left with something that is notoriously unreliable,
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and nothing like how we think and behave,
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at least most of the time.
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Regardless, whatever you're thinking about right now
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isn't reliant on a single neuron lodged in the corner of your brain.
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Rather, the mind emerges from the collective activities
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of many, many neurons.
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There are billions of neurons in the human brain,
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and trillions of connections between all those neurons.
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When you turn such a complicated system like that on,
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it could behave in all sorts of weird ways, but it doesn't.
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The neurons in our brain follow simple rules, just like the fish,
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so that as a group, their activity self-organizes into reliable patterns
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that let you do things like recognize faces,
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successfully repeat the same task over and over again,
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and keep all those silly little habits that everyone likes about you.
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So, what are the simple rules when it comes to the brain?
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The basic function of each neuron in the brain
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is to either excite or inhibit other neurons.
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If you connect a few neurons together into a simple circuit,
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you can generate rhythmic patterns of activity,
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feedback loops that ramp up or shut down a signal,
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coincidence detectors,
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and disinhibition,
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where two inhibitory neurons can actually activate another neuron
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by removing inhibitory brakes.
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As more and more neurons are connected,
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increasingly complex patterns of activity emerge from the network.
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Soon, so many neurons are interacting in so many different ways at once
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that the system becomes chaotic.
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The trajectory of the network's activity cannot be easily explained
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by the simple local circuits described earlier.
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And yet, from this chaos, patterns can emerge,
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and then emerge again and again in a reproducible manner.
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At some point, these emergent patterns of activity
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become sufficiently complex,
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and curious to begin studying their own biological origins,
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not to mention emergence.
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And what we found in emergent phenomena at vastly different scales
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is that same remarkable characteristic as the fish displayed:
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That emergence doesn't require someone or something to be in charge.
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If the right rules are in place,
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and some basic conditions are met,
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a complex system will fall into the same habits over and over again,
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turning chaos into order.
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That's true in the molecular pandemonium that lets your cells function,
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the tangled thicket of neurons that produces your thoughts and identity,
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your network of friends and family,
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all the way up to the structures and economies of our cities across the planet.
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