From 4ef2aa30c67af07d3b9411c15ed0c7a3994a2a27 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Holden Rohrer
Date: Sun, 26 Jan 2020 11:33:11 -0500
Subject: cleanup (esp. of abstract format)
---
document/abstract.tex | 6 +-----
document/report.tex | 2 +-
2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
(limited to 'document')
diff --git a/document/abstract.tex b/document/abstract.tex
index 2fb3e21..2eda69c 100644
--- a/document/abstract.tex
+++ b/document/abstract.tex
@@ -1,11 +1,7 @@
-\vskip 0pt plus .5fill
-\centerline{\fourteenbf Abstract}
-{\leftskip=.5in\rightskip=.5in\baselineskip=14pt
Emergent group behaviors were observed which point toward a certain degree of cooperation by antlions.
The donut theory, the forerunner in describing antlions' spatial distribution, asserts that the insects form a ring to capture ants approximately equitably.
Similar ``cooperative'' behavior was observed, with the antlions remaining under the soil when the surface was overpopulated (demonstrable by a significantly lower number of pits forming in smaller trials).
The donut theory was confirmed by the observed spatial distribution because antlions often stuck to the side of the trial area despite there being significant available space on the inside of the circle where an individual could gain competitive advantage.
The hypothesis that they exhibit more extreme behaviors under space constraints was confirmed because, proportional to the number introduced, especially in the 8x7 trial, cannibalism and non-formation of pits increased significantly---likely as a compensatory mechanism to ensure that a stable ``surface group'' could still safely exist.
Additionally, territory (measurable by the Voronoi diagrams and by nearest-neighbor) decreased towards the later trials, and the patterns didn't merely display the same structure scaled down---rather, antlions accepted more dense conditions by increasing pit density.
-This likely corresponds to natural conditions (especially in hatcheries) where some proportion of the antlions remain on the surface (increasing with population density because it's understood to mean a prevalence of food), and as the surface antlions become adults (sometimes fed through cannibalism), new larvae emerge to take their place and sustain the species' propagation.\par
-}
+This likely corresponds to natural conditions (especially in hatcheries) where some proportion of the antlions remain on the surface (increasing with population density because it's understood to mean a prevalence of food), and as the surface antlions become adults (sometimes fed through cannibalism), new larvae emerge to take their place and sustain the species' propagation.
diff --git a/document/report.tex b/document/report.tex
index 27e44f6..1395d26 100644
--- a/document/report.tex
+++ b/document/report.tex
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-\long\def\headdata{\input abstract}
+\long\def\abstract{\input abstract\par}
\input ../format
--
cgit