52 research outputs found
Random walks in directed modular networks
Because diffusion typically involves symmetric interactions, scant attention
has been focused on studying asymmetric cases. However, important networked
systems underlain by diffusion (e.g. cortical networks and WWW) are inherently
directed. In the case of undirected diffusion, it can be shown that the
steady-state probability of the random walk dynamics is fully correlated with
the degree, which no longer holds for directed networks. We investigate the
relationship between such probability and the inward node degree, which we call
efficiency, in modular networks. Our findings show that the efficiency of a
given community depends mostly on the balance between its ingoing and outgoing
connections. In addition, we derive analytical expressions to show that the
internal degree of the nodes do not play a crucial role in their efficiency,
when considering the Erd\H{o}s-R\'enyi and Barab\'asi-Albert models. The
results are illustrated with respect to the macaque cortical network, providing
subsidies for improving transportation and communication systems
Réplicas ampliadas de microfósseis em resina odontológica: usos didáticos e científicos em micropaleontologia
O uso de réplicas de microfósseis em escala macrométrica consiste em uma ferramenta didática muito útil para os estudos de micropaleontologia. Analisando um espécime com o auxílio do tato e visão é possível entender os aspectos estruturais e morfológicos dos organismos com maior eficiência. A técnica de confecção de réplicas de microfósseis representa uma alternativa em relação à dependência da infra-estrutura laboratorial necessária para a identificação dos microfósseis. Com esta alternativa é possível estudá-los em qualquer ambiente acadêmico ou eventos que não disponham dos devidos equipamentos para sua visualização, uma vez que se torna mais fácil compreender e estudar os espécimes. As resinas odontológicas utilizadas na confecção oferecem um excelente resultado quanto à pigmentação, textura, brilho, opacidade e resistência, pois estes materiais são o que há de mais fiel na substituição dos tecidos da boca humana, e ao transferir esta técnica para a paleoarte obtem-se excelentes resultados estéticos. Para a confecção dos modelos, primeiramente foram feitas imagens em Microscópio Eletrônico de Varredura (MEV) em diversos ângulos, para melhor visualização dos detalhes. Inicia-se, então, o processo de escultura, usando como base um bloco de cera odontológica do tipo Utilidade (ou Nº 7), bico de Bunsen (ou lamparina de bancada), lamparina de Hannau, escova e espátulas. Concluída a fase de escultura, fabrica-se, através da moldagem tradicional, uma matriz em dois hemisférios, consituída de silicone e gesso para produzir a fase resina, e logo depois da demuflagem, o acabamento com motor de suspensão. Finalmente, executa-se o polimento em polidora química, variando de acordo com a textura de cada espécie. Os exemplares apresentam ótima aceitação no meio científico devido à fidelidade em relação ao espécime original, gerando interesse na confecção de novas esculturas, projetando para o futuro a abrangência desta técnica, desenvolvendo a escultura de diferentes assembléias de microfósseis encontradas em amostras para pesquisa.Sesiones libresFacultad de Ciencias Naturales y Muse
Strong correlations between text quality and complex networks features
Concepts of complex networks have been used to obtain metrics that were
correlated to text quality established by scores assigned by human judges.
Texts produced by high-school students in Portuguese were represented as
scale-free networks (word adjacency model), from which typical network features
such as the in/outdegree, clustering coefficient and shortest path were
obtained. Another metric was derived from the dynamics of the network growth,
based on the variation of the number of connected components. The scores
assigned by the human judges according to three text quality criteria
(coherence and cohesion, adherence to standard writing conventions and theme
adequacy/development) were correlated with the network measurements. Text
quality for all three criteria was found to decrease with increasing average
values of outdegrees, clustering coefficient and deviation from the dynamics of
network growth. Among the criteria employed, cohesion and coherence showed the
strongest correlation, which probably indicates that the network measurements
are able to capture how the text is developed in terms of the concepts
represented by the nodes in the networks. Though based on a particular set of
texts and specific language, the results presented here point to potential
applications in other instances of text analysis.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
How Many Nodes are Effectively Accessed in Complex Networks?
The measurement called accessibility has been proposed as a means to quantify
the efficiency of the communication between nodes in complex networks. This
article reports important results regarding the properties of the
accessibility, including its relationship with the average minimal time to
visit all nodes reachable after steps along a random walk starting from a
source, as well as the number of nodes that are visited after a finite period
of time. We characterize the relationship between accessibility and the average
number of walks required in order to visit all reachable nodes (the exploration
time), conjecture that the maximum accessibility implies the minimal
exploration time, and confirm the relationship between the accessibility values
and the number of nodes visited after a basic time unit. The latter
relationship is investigated with respect to three types of dynamics, namely:
traditional random walks, self-avoiding random walks, and preferential random
walks.Comment: 8 pages and 7 figure
Good practices for a literature survey are not followed by authors while preparing scientific manuscripts
The number of citations received by authors in scientific journals has become
a major parameter to assess individual researchers and the journals themselves
through the impact factor. A fair assessment therefore requires that the
criteria for selecting references in a given manuscript should be unbiased with
respect to the authors or the journals cited. In this paper, we advocate that
authors should follow two mandatory principles to select papers (later
reflected in the list of references) while studying the literature for a given
research: i) consider similarity of content with the topics investigated, lest
very related work should be reproduced or ignored; ii) perform a systematic
search over the network of citations including seminal or very related papers.
We use formalisms of complex networks for two datasets of papers from the arXiv
repository to show that neither of these two criteria is fulfilled in practice
Modeling Connectivity in Terms of Network Activity
A new complex network model is proposed which is founded on growth with new
connections being established proportionally to the current dynamical activity
of each node, which can be understood as a generalization of the
Barabasi-Albert static model. By using several topological measurements, as
well as optimal multivariate methods (canonical analysis and maximum likelihood
decision), we show that this new model provides, among several other
theoretical types of networks including Watts-Strogatz small-world networks,
the greatest compatibility with three real-world cortical networks.Comment: A working manuscript, 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Evolving Networks and the Development of Neural Systems
It is now generally assumed that the heterogeneity of most networks in nature
probably arises via preferential attachment of some sort. However, the origin
of various other topological features, such as degree-degree correlations and
related characteristics, is often not clear and attributed to specific
functional requirements. We show how it is possible to analyse a very general
scenario in which nodes gain or lose edges according to any (e.g., nonlinear)
functions of local and/or global degree information. Applying our method to two
rather different examples of brain development -- synaptic pruning in humans
and the neural network of the worm C. Elegans -- we find that simple
biologically motivated assumptions lead to very good agreement with
experimental data. In particular, many nontrivial topological features of the
worm's brain arise naturally at a critical point.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in J. Stat. Mec
Beyond the average: Detecting global singular nodes from local features in complex networks
Deviations from the average can provide valuable insights about the
organization of natural systems. The present article extends this important
principle to the systematic identification and analysis of singular motifs in
complex networks. Six measurements quantifying different and complementary
features of the connectivity around each node of a network were calculated, and
multivariate statistical methods applied to identify singular nodes. The
potential of the presented concepts and methodology was illustrated with
respect to different types of complex real-world networks, namely the US air
transportation network, the protein-protein interactions of the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the Roget thesaurus networks. The obtained
singular motifs possessed unique functional roles in the networks. Three
classic theoretical network models were also investigated, with the
Barab\'asi-Albert model resulting in singular motifs corresponding to hubs,
confirming the potential of the approach. Interestingly, the number of
different types of singular node motifs as well as the number of their
instances were found to be considerably higher in the real-world networks than
in any of the benchmark networks
Biodiversity increases and decreases ecosystem stability
International audienc
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