Hive mind

A hive mind, (TV: Asylum of the Daleks, Death in Heaven, WC: Pond Life) group mind, gestalt consciousness or mass mind (COMIC: Culture Shock!) was a collection of separate, distinct organisms with a shared consciousness, which may or may not have meant that the creatures were without individuality. (TV: Planet of the Ood)

Gestalts were creatures that together made a single entity. Axos was a "composite creature" whose individual units were different but still linked psychically. The Fendahl, however, was made up of twelve Fendahleen and the Core, with a High Priestess seeming to have control, though no clear psychic link between them. (TV: The Claws of Axos, Image of the Fendahl)

In the case of a hive mind, though, the general idea was that the same mind existed in multiple, separate beings or that each being's mind was linked with the others, allowing all organisms to know what was happening to any one organism of the hive. It was also a trait of a hive mind that each individual of the hive referred to itself as "we" or "us" rather than "I", showing that it spoke for the entire hive mind. (TV: The Impossible Planet)

Hive minds often had a shared memory. (TV: Last of the Time Lords)

The Ood were psychically linked through a hive mind (WC: Pond Life) but still retained their individualism. (TV: Planet of the Ood) Some hive minds even had leaders. The Amaryll were led by the Alvega Controller; (COMIC: The Amaryll Challenge) the Rutans had a Queen, (PROSE: Shakedown) as did the Wirrn. (PROSE: Placebo Effect)

Though the Daleks did not have a hive mind in the true sense of the word, they telepathically shared information through a pathweb, which both Oswin Oswald (TV: Asylum of the Daleks) and the Twelfth Doctor compared to a hive mind. (TV: Twice Upon a Time)

The various Cyber-subspecies operated via the usage of a hive mind, such as the Cybermen of the Mondasian colony ship, (TV: The Doctor Falls) and those created by. (TV: Death in Heaven) The Cybermen of the Cyber-Empire had their own hive mind. It was possible to disconnect their Cyber-Warriors from it, though the hive mind was capable of detecting this. (TV: The Timeless Children) The faction of Cybermen who had invaded the Federation universe were connected through the cyber-web. (COMIC: Assimilation²) A powerful group of Cybermen were all connected to a shared consciousness that self-identified as the Cyberiad. (TV: Nightmare in Silver) The Cybermen created by from the corpses of the dead were also connected through a hive mind.

Because of their abilities and similarities to known hive minds, both the Vespiforms and the Hervoken may have been hive minds as well. (TV: The Unicorn and the Wasp, PROSE: Forever Autumn)

Torchwood theorised that Weevils had a low-level telepathic ability to share emotions. (TV: Combat)

The Squall were an extreme example of a gestalt consciousness; the sum intelligence of the collective Squall consciousness was distributed in small quantities. A lone Squall was barely smarter than an animal, but a whole pack was capable of speaking in full sentences and near-genius intelligence. (PROSE: Paradox Lost)

Richard Harries speculated that all beings had a collective memory that could be accessed. He experimented on rats to test this hypothesis. (PROSE: The Banquo Legacy)

The Psionovores had an undefined natural energy existence, but could coalesce into a gestalt physical form, given enough will. (AUDIO: Minuet in Hell)

An intelligence on a planet visited by the Fifth Doctor tried to lure travellers to join its gestalt, almost succeeding with Adric. (PROSE: Hearts of Stone)

At the end of the universe, the last humans on Ember attempted to transform the people of 21st century Earth into a group mind (which they called "Singularity") through the Somnus Foundation. They were defeated by the Fifth Doctor and Turlough. (AUDIO: Singularity)

The Seventh Doctor bumped into a sentient cell culture whose mass mind was able to send him a telepathic distress call. (COMIC: Culture Shock!)

The Yulians of Yula possessed a hive mind, which they called the Communal Will, to which each individual fed their psyche and in turn fed from the psyches of the others. Krem-ling planned to seize control of the Communal Will, which would have enabled him to feed off of entire worlds at a time instead of individuals. After Krem-ling was destroyed by his servant Marsalla, she became part of the Communal Will as well. (PROSE: The Vampires of Crellium)

In the Federation universe, the Borg operated a hive mind comparable to the Cybermen. (COMIC: Assimilation²)

Known hive minds

 * The Axos (TV: The Claws of Axos)
 * The Borg (COMIC: Assimilation²)
 * The Central Committee of Mondas (AUDIO: Spare Parts)
 * The Chronomites (GAME: TARDIS)
 * The Culture (COMIC: Culture Shock!)
 * The Darkness (PROSE: The Well-Mannered War)
 * The Fendahl (TV: Image of the Fendahl)
 * The Gappa (PROSE: Snowglobe 7)
 * The Jixen (TV: Hound of the Korven)
 * The Nestenes and Autons (TV: Spearhead from Space, Terror of the Autons, Rose)
 * The Rutans (TV: Horror of Fang Rock)
 * The Skorpius Flies (TV: Dreamland)
 * The Tractators (TV: Frontios)
 * The Xaranti (PROSE: Deep Blue)

The Cyberiad was the general collection and connection of all Cyberman minds. Millions of Cybermen could be simultaneously controlled by the Cyber-Planner using this combined mind. (TV: Nightmare in Silver)

Isolus were small, white, jelly-fish shaped creatures that could hover in the air and could travel through space in small pods in groups of several billion. They communicated telepathically, and used this connection to form worlds out of pure thought to play in as they travelled. An Isolus couldn't cope with being separated from all of its siblings. (TV: Fear Her)

The Ood were a gestalt kept together peacefully by all being connected to a third brain, the Ood Brain, as well as having their forebrain and hind brain. They communicated telepathically with each other in the form of singing. (TV: Planet of the Ood)

The Stenza had a hive mind, containing all their collective knowledge, which could be accessed even by an individual who had been separated from the rest of their kind. (TV: The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos)

The Toclafane were at one point simply human, but upon reaching Utopia they were converted into heads inside balls of metal and could communicate with each other remotely to perform tasks in groups. (TV: Utopia, The Sound of Drums, Last of the Time Lords)

The Vashta Nerada were a gestalt of countless microscopic creatures that, due to their number, could devour anything in seconds. Each being part of a hive mind, they could work together to "walk" in a spacesuit. (TV: Silence in the Library / Forest of the Dead)

The Wirrn could communicate with each other enough to allow them to move as packs and could receive orders from their leader via a hive mind. (TV: The Ark in Space)