Quote from zedDoubleNaught:
Is there any research or theories on the adoption rate of jumping on to the pattern? Or, the rate at which the flock wholly turns left, from the earliest left turners to the last few? Surely, they don't all do it exactly at the same time, there is probably some distribution curve to describe it.
Example, birds are too fast for me, but I saw on Planet Earth, in E Africa they have a trick of 3-4 men walking calmly straight towards a pride of lions after they catch something. First, one lion gets spooked and runs away, then 2, then a bunch, then a declining amount til the last one runs away.
I don't know, but when I watch tick data, it looks like logit curves but flipped around the x and y axes. Maybe this reflects an adoption rate, or a CDF of the adoption rate distribution curve.
An interesting observation. I would suggest looking at the tick data in a raster (much like your TV screen) way stacking periods of tape on top of each other rather than following each other. This technique instantly will show you flocks.
