Scientific Colloquium
December 2, 2011
THOMAS
SEELEY
CORNELL UNIVERSITY
"Swarm Intelligence in Honey Bees"
Swarm intelligence is the
solving of a cognitive problem by two or more individuals who
independently collect information and process it through social
interactions. With the right organization, a group can overcome
the cognitive limitations of its members and achieve a high
collective IQ. To understand how to endow groups with swarm
intelligence, it is useful to examine natural systems that have
evolved this ability. An excellent example is a swarm of honey
bees solving the life-or-death problem of finding a new home. A
honey bee swarm accomplishes this through a process that
includes collective fact-finding, open sharing of information,
vigorous debating, and fair voting by the hundreds of bees in a
swarm that function as nest-site scouts. Thomas Seeley will show
how these incredible insects have much to teach us when it comes
to achieving collective wisdom and effective group decision
making.