Be it through the Internet, Facebook, the local grapevine or the spread  of disease, interaction networks influence nearly every part of our  lives.
By observing interactions in ant colonies, University of Arizona  researcher Anna Dornhaus and doctoral candidate Benjamin Blonder have  uncovered new evidence that challenges the assumption that all  interaction networks have the same properties that maximize their  efficiency. The National Science Foundation-funded study was published  in the Public Library of Science on May 20.
"Many people who have studied interaction networks in the past have  found them to be very efficient at transferring resources," said  Blonder. "The dominant paradigm has been that most self-organized  networks tend to have this universal structure and that one should look  for this structure and make predictions based on this structure. Our  study challenges that and demonstrates that there are some interaction  networks that don't have these properties yet are still clearly  functional."
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