M. Chupeau 1, 2 O. Bénichou 2 S. Redner 3, 4
Physical Review E , American Physical Society (APS), 2017, 95 (1), pp.012157
How to best exploit patchy resources? This long-standing question belongs to the extensively studied class of explore/exploit problems that arise in a wide range of situations, from animal foraging, to robotic exploration, and to human decision processes. Despite its broad relevance, the issue of optimal exploitation has previously only been tackled through two paradigmatic limiting models—patch-use and random search—that do not account for the interplay between searcher motion within patches and resource depletion. Here, we bridge this gap by introducing a minimal patch exploitation model that incorporates this coupling: the searcher depletes the resources along its random-walk trajectory within a patch and travels to a new patch after it takes $\mathcal{S}$ consecutive steps without finding resources. We compute the distribution of the amount of resources $F_t$ consumed by time $t$ for this non-Markovian random walker and show that exploring multiple patches is beneficial. In one dimension, we analytically derive the optimal strategy to maximize $F_t$. We show that this strategy is robust with respect to the distribution of resources within patches and the criterion for leaving a given patch. We also show that $F_t$ can be optimized in the ecologically-relevant case of two-dimensional patchy environments.
- 1. LPTMS – Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Modèles Statistiques
- 2. LPTMC – Laboratoire de Physique Théorique de la Matière Condensée
- 3. BU – Boston University [Boston]
- 4. Santa Fe Institute