"The Music of Many: Rhythm and Synchrony in Animal Collectives"

Speaker
Prof. Iain Couzin, FRS, (Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour)
Event date
Event time
17:15 - 18:15
Venue
St John's College Garden Auditorium
St. Giles
Oxford
OX1 3JP
Event type
Lectures and seminars
Event cost
£100/£85 for Full Festival Pass; £25/£20 for evening concerts; £15/£12 for daytime concerts; £3/£2 for lectures
Disabled access?
Yes
Booking required
Required

From flocks of birds sweeping across the sky to schools of fish turning as one, animal groups often move with a precision that feels almost musical. Yet there is no leader, no score and no conductor. This talk explores how rhythm and synchrony emerge from simple interactions between individuals. Like musicians in an ensemble, animals continuously adjust their timing and movement in response to those around them, producing coordinated patterns that no single individual controls. Drawing on research across insects, fish, birds and humans, I will show how these shared rhythms allow groups to make decisions, transmit information and respond rapidly to change. By revealing the hidden 'music' that binds many individuals into a collective whole, this work highlights why synchrony is one of nature’s most powerful organising principles.