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A model of octopus epidermis pattern mimicry mechanisms using inverse operation of the Turing reaction model

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  • Takeshi Ishida

Abstract

Many cephalopods such as octopi and squid can purposefully and rapidly change their skin color. Furthermore, it is widely known that some octopi have the ability to rapidly change the color and unevenness of their skin to mimic their surroundings. However, there has been little research published on the mechanisms by which an octopus recognizes its surrounding landscape and changes its skin pattern. We are unaware of any hypothetical model that explains this mimicry mechanism to date. In this study, the mechanism of octopus skin pattern change was assumed to be based on the Turing pattern model. Here, pattern formation using the Turing model was realized using an equivalent filter calculation model and a cellular automaton instead of directly solving the differential equations. It was shown that this model can create various patterns using two feature parameters. Furthermore, for visual recognition where two features are extracted from the Turing pattern image, a method that requires minimal calculation using the characteristics of the cellular Turing pattern model is proposed. These two calculations can be expressed in the same mathematical frame based on the cellular automaton model using a convolution filter. As a result, a model that is capable of extracting features from patterns and reconstructing those patterns rapidly can be created. This represents a basic model of the mimicry mechanism of octopi. Further, this study demonstrates the potential for creating a model with minimal learning calculation for application to machine learning.

Suggested Citation

  • Takeshi Ishida, 2021. "A model of octopus epidermis pattern mimicry mechanisms using inverse operation of the Turing reaction model," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(8), pages 1-21, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0256025
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0256025
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    1. Noam Josef & Piero Amodio & Graziano Fiorito & Nadav Shashar, 2012. "Camouflaging in a Complex Environment—Octopuses Use Specific Features of Their Surroundings for Background Matching," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(5), pages 1-6, May.
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