A Brief History of Stigmergy


Guy Theraulaz, Eric Bonabeau

Artificial Life 5(2), pages 97-116
Spring 1999

Stigmergy is a class of mechanisms that mediate animal-animal interactions. Its introduction in 1959 by Pierre-Paul Grassé made it possible to explain what had been until then considered paradoxical observations: In an insect society individuals work as if they were alone while their collective activities appear to be coordinated. In this article we describe the history of stigmergy in the context of social insects and discuss the general properties of two distinct stigmergic mechanisms: quantitative stigmergy and qualitative stigmergy.

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Publication

— authors

Guy Theraulaz, Eric Bonabeau

— status

published

— sort

article in journal

— publication date

Spring 1999

— journal

Artificial Life

— volume

5

— issue

2

— pages

97-116

URLs

original page

identifiers

— DOI

10.1162/106454699568700

— print ISBN

1064-5462

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