The Levy walk in which the frequency of occurrence of step lengths follows a power-law distribution, can be observed in the migratory behavior of organisms at various levels. Levy walks with power exponents close to 2 are observed, and the reasons are unclear. This study aims to propose a model that universally generates inverse square Levy walks (called Cauchy walks) and to identify the conditions under which Cauchy walks appear. We demonstrate that Cauchy walks emerge universally in goal-oriented tasks. We use the term "goal-oriented" when the goal is clear, but this can be achieved in different ways, which cannot be uniquely determined. We performed a simulation in which an agent observed the data generated from a probability distribution in a two-dimensional space and successively estimated the central coordinates of that probability distribution. The agent has a model of probability distribution as a hypothesis for data-generating distribution and can modify the model such that each time a data point is observed, thereby increasing the estimated probability of occurrence of the observed data. To achieve this, the center coordinates of the model must be close to those of the observed data. However, in the case of a two-dimensional space, arbitrariness arises in the direction of correction of the center; this task is goal oriented. We analyze two cases: a strategy that allocates the amount of modification randomly in the x- and y-directions, and a strategy that determines allocation such that movement is minimized. The results reveal that when a random strategy is used, the frequency of occurrence of the movement lengths shows a power-law distribution with exponent 2. When the minimum strategy is used, the Brownian walk appears. The presence or absence of the constraint of minimizing the amount of movement may be a factor that causes the difference between Brownian and Levy walks.
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