That's great! This nose (and his peripherals) is becoming a cathedral !
batwing, shark fins, s-duct, turning/twisting vanes, serrated twisted bargeboard, very narrow thinly hanging nose tip.
We'll soon have a token regulation for this!
So, tell me if i'm wrong, the inlet of the nose or noselet is driven by the outlet of the S-duct and obviously nose tip front wing standard section interaction in ground effect and the whole thing outlet is driven by the floor inlet, inlet of one thing being part of the outlet of the other via this new bargeboard.
The whole thing then capture more air with good total pressure from even above the nose tip that would be unused without all those bits and pieces.
The batwing vortices impart some outwash just ahead of the bow which reduce drag overall and reduce nose lift.
And because at the nose tip (where the yaw has most effect) the flow is twisted, the flow conditioning make all this more stable under yaw.
Anderson explain that the cutted bargeboards create downforce in there own right but it seems more indirect.
There is a crossover of some kind in the flow there so maybe we could expect some vortices.