Sunday, June 17, 2012

A day in the life of...

I thought I'd try and give some kind of idea what it is I do every day, without sending everyone to sleep. One of the projects I'm doing right now (hopefully) gives a nice little example!

I'm trying to model how lizards might move through the landscape, in a collaboration with someone who actually knows something about lizards - because there's no point doing modelling if what you're modelling is completely unrealistic!

One current idea I'm working on is the concept that the landscape contains a set number of basking rocks (in this case: 2000, randomly placed in a square kilometre), which every lizard has to have access to in order to survive. So to over-simplify, let's assume that each established lizard has a territory containing one of these basking rocks. Juvenile lizards disperse from their maternal den in order to find their own territory, and we assume that they sprint off in a random direction (they're not very bright), and don't stop until they either find an unoccupied rock or die without a territory. We arbitrarily set the distance they can travel before keeling over to 20 metres. Using this information, we can then generate a map of which rocks are accessible (i.e. within 20 metres) from other rocks, and connect them with lines:


One thing that immediately becomes clear is that there are quite a few rocks that are more than 20 metres away from any other rock - this means that any baby lizard trying to find another territory from there will inevitably die, unless their mother has died (giving up her claim to the maternal territory) and it is the first of its siblings to claim it. Clearly, setting a hard limit for the distance a juvenile can travel has serious implications for survival!

The next problem is to work out how likely a juvenile from a given site is to find another rock (assuming there even are any within 20 metres). As they're not very bright, we assume they'll only stumble across a rock if they travel within one metre of it during their dash to freedom - so we can draw lines that show the range of angles they can travel to find each rock, like below. Though most of them are straightforward to get to, in this example, you can see there is a rock directly behind another rock - so the juvenile will always just choose the first one it reaches. There is also a lot of space between rocks, so a juvenile has to be pretty lucky to be able to establish a territory in the first place!



Things aren't always so straightforward, however. Sometimes a lizard might be lucky and pass one rock just to find another - in the example below, in a couple of places one rock is partially covering the one behind it, but there is a small chance that a lizard will go straight past it and find the rock behind it.



There are more complicated cases again if two rocks are within a metre of each other!

Next time on the mathsy part of the blog, I'm thinking of looking at Snakes and Ladders - and how it gets more complicated when you have to choose between moving multiple tokens - or I could go back to looking at Cribbage like I did a while ago in this post. Any thoughts?

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Didn't Know (aka the Duck Song)


Thanks everyone for your support and comments while I tried out this new gimmick to drum up interest! Voting has now closed and the clear winner was Didn't Know, one of my most often-played songs recently!

Didn't Know - 6 votes
Green Eyes - 3 votes
The Garden - 1 vote
Survive You - 1 vote

The very simple riff for this song entered my head in a dream, and persisted after I woke up... I managed to play it on a guitar, and then all I needed to do was add lyrics. I really had trouble with this part of the process, and ended up putting in some placeholder lyrics about an "omnipotent duck" to try and move things along. I fully intended to change them for something more serious later on, but my girlfriend insisted they stay... and so has basically everyone else who's heard the song so far. When recording, I gave Dave completely free rein and told him to add as much messed-up stuff as possible - I think he's done an amazing job of that :)

So here it is - enjoy!


... oh. I guess you want to know who won the free copy of the EP. Well, I used my magical random number generator, and the winner was... Ariel Pascoe (whose fine vocals you'll see featured on the final cut of the EP!). But she's already getting a free copy, so I ran it again and the winner is the first voter, who I happen to know is the infamous IriXx Jorvik! She's planning to write a remix for "the duck song" so I think it's very fitting that she wins the free EP. Congratulations!

More news will be coming up soon, so stay tuned! Who knows, if you're lucky I'll even release another track before the EP launch and give away another copy!

Monday, June 4, 2012

Return of the prodigal EP

Hey peeps!

As my regular followers know, I like to play music and have been slowly putting together an EP of my own songs over the course of the last couple of years. I'm excited to announce that it's nearly done, and I'll hopefully be launching it later this year!

We have a relatively polished version of each of the tracks, and I'd like to put one of them on here - but I'll let you decide which. I've already posted one of them (Longest Night), but there are four previously unaired tracks left to choose from:

Green Eyes
Survive You
Didn't Know
The Garden

Just mention which track you'd like to hear in the comments below, and after a few days (or once I get enough interest) I'll choose the track with the most comments to publish here on the blog! Just to keep things interesting, I'll randomly choose one of the responses to win a free copy of my EP :) So what have you got to lose?

(Note: if the site won't let you post a comment, try anonymous mode!)