Migrations happen for a reason, not randomly. A new study, based on computer simulation, attempts to explain the effect of so-called directional migration – migration for a reason – on cooperative behaviours and social cohesion. These results appear in a study about to be published in European Physical Journal B by Hongyan Cheng from Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications and colleagues.
via Phys.org: Physics News http://phys.org/news/2013-04-physicists-decipher-social-cohesion-issues.html
via Phys.org: Physics News http://phys.org/news/2013-04-physicists-decipher-social-cohesion-issues.html
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