Local interactions are when things around you talk to each other in a small group, just like friends at recess who only play with their closest friends.
Imagine you're on a playground full of kids, and you're part of a team. You pass the ball to your friend next to you, who then passes it to another friend nearby. This is a local interaction: each kid only interacts with the people right beside them, not everyone on the whole playground.
Like a Line of Blocks
Think about building with blocks. If one block falls, it might knock over the block next to it, but the block far away stays up. That's like how local interactions work: only the close neighbors are affected, and they might cause changes in their own neighbors too.
A Real-Life Example
It’s like a domino effect, if one domino falls, it knocks over the one next to it, which then knocks over the one after that. But it doesn’t jump all the way to the end of the line right away. It starts with just one or two dominoes nearby.
So local interactions are like little conversations between neighbors, simple, close, and real!
Examples
- A group of birds fighting for food in a tree.
- Kids playing tag in the park next door.
- Neighbors sharing gardening tips.
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See also
- How can we best design public spaces for stronger communities?
- How Do Corals Build Reefs? | California Academy of Sciences?
- How do large river floods affect the ocean?
- How Does An Anatomy of the Urban Monoculture Work?
- How do you build cities for wildlife not just people new research?