Communicative intelligence: from biology to design perspectives

  • Carla Langella
  • Flavia Borghese
  • Valentina Perricone
##plugins.pubIds.doi.readerDisplayName##: https://doi.org/10.18682/cdc.vi239.11536

Résumé

In nature, organisms communicate to each other exchanging key information, primarily for intra and interspecific recognition (e.g., between parents and offspring, predators, members in a herd’s hierarchy)

Références

Ancillotto, L., Pafundi, D., Cappa, F., Chaverri, G., Gamba, M., Cervo, R., & Russo, D. (2022).

Bats mimic hymenopteran insect sounds to deter predators. Current Biology, 32(9),

R408-R409.

Bahadur, B., Sampica, J. D., Tchon, J. L., & Marzen, V. P. (2013). Direct-Dry-Film Optical

Bonding: Finding New Applications. Information Display, 29(4), 34-39.

Baumeister, R. F. (2014). Self-regulation, ego depletion, and inhibition. Neuropsychologia,

, 313-319.

Biró, L. P., Kertész, K., Vértesy, Z., Márk, G. I., Bálint, Z., Lousse, V., & Vigneron, J. P. (2007).

Living photonic crystals: butterfly scales—nanostructure and optical properties. Materials

Science and Engineering: C, 27(5-8), 941-946.

Bradbury, J. W., & Vehrencamp, S. L. (1998). Principles of animal communication (Vol. 132).

Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.

Publiée
2024-07-25