Speakers Nicolas Perony: Animal scientist
Why you should listen to him:
Nicolas Perony started his career as a
roboticist. But after one of his robots -- which was designed to follow a
white line -- destroyed itself because of a lighting snafu on demo day,
he realized that he was less interested in creating complicated robots
and more interested in studying the complexity that already exists out
there in the animal kingdom. He quickly changed course and is now a
quantitative scientist at the Chair of Systems Design at ETH Zurich,
where he studies the structure and dynamics of animal societies.
Perony
conducts his research by placing GPS collars on animals like
Bechstein's bats and meerkats, and studying the spacial data of the
group. He creates models of the movement over time to see patterns. He
then tries to ascertain at the simple rules that individuals in the
animal group seem to be following that, when done en masse, result in
the larger flow. In other words, he looks at the underlying mechanics
that lead to the collective movement of animal groups.
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