742 research outputs found
Transient Pulse Formation in Jasmonate Signaling Pathway
The jasmonate (JA) signaling pathway in plants is activated as defense
response to a number of stresses like attacks by pests or pathogens and
wounding by animals. Some recent experiments provide significant new knowledge
on the molecular detail and connectivity of the pathway. The pathway has two
major components in the form of feedback loops, one negative and the other
positive. We construct a minimal mathematical model, incorporating the feedback
loops, to study the dynamics of the JA signaling pathway. The model exhibits
transient gene expression activity in the form of JA pulses in agreement with
experimental observations. The dependence of the pulse amplitude, duration and
peak time on the key parameters of the model is determined computationally. The
deterministic and stochastic aspects of the pathway dynamics are investigated
using both the full mathematical model as well as a reduced version of it. We
also compare the mechanism of pulse formation with the known mechanisms of
pulse generation in some bacterial and viral systems
Functional characteristics of a double positive feedback loop coupled with autorepression
We study the functional characteristics of a two-gene motif consisting of a
double positive feedback loop and an autoregulatory negative feedback loop. The
motif appears in the gene regulatory network controlling the functional
activity of pancreatic -cells. The model exhibits bistability and
hysteresis in appropriate parameter regions. The two stable steady states
correspond to low (OFF state) and high (ON state) protein levels respectively.
Using a deterministic approach, we show that the region of bistability
increases in extent when the copy number of one of the genes is reduced from
two to one. The negative feedback loop has the effect of reducing the size of
the bistable region. Loss of a gene copy, brought about by mutations, hampers
the normal functioning of the -cells giving rise to the genetic
disorder, maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY). The diabetic phenotype
makes its appearance when a sizable fraction of the -cells is in the OFF
state. Using stochastic simulation techniques, we show that, on reduction of
the gene copy number, there is a transition from the monostable ON to the ON
state in the bistable region of the parameter space. Fluctuations in the
protein levels, arising due to the stochastic nature of gene expression, can
give rise to transitions between the ON and OFF states. We show that as the
strength of autorepression increases, the ONOFF state transitions become
less probable whereas the reverse transitions are more probable. The
implications of the results in the context of the occurrence of MODY are
pointed out..Comment: 9 pages 14 figure
Emergent Bistability : Effects of Additive and Multiplicative Noise
Positive feedback and cooperativity in the regulation of gene expression are
generally considered to be necessary for obtaining bistable expression states.
Recently, a novel mechanism of bistability termed emergent bistability has been
proposed which involves only positive feedback and no cooperativity in the
regulation. An additional positive feedback loop is effectively generated due
to the inhibition of cellular growth by the synthesized proteins. The
mechanism, demonstrated for a synthetic circuit, may be prevalent in natural
systems also as some recent experimental results appear to suggest. In this
paper, we study the effects of additive and multiplicative noise on the
dynamics governing emergent bistability. The calculational scheme employed is
based on the Langevin and Fokker-Planck formalisms. The steady state
probability distributions of protein levels and the mean first passage times
are computed for different noise strengths and system parameters. In the region
of bistability, the bimodal probability distribution is shown to be a linear
combination of a lognormal and a Gaussian distribution. The variances of the
individual distributions and the relative weights of the distributions are
further calculated for varying noise strengths and system parameters. The
experimental relevance of the model results is also pointed out.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, version accepted for publication in Eur. Phys.
J.
Reaction diffusion processes on random and scale-free networks
We study the discrete Gierer-Meinhardt model of reaction-diffusion on three
different types of networks: regular, random and scale-free. The model dynamics
lead to the formation of stationary Turing patterns in the steady state in
certain parameter regions. Some general features of the patterns are studied
through numerical simulation. The results for the random and scale-free
networks show a marked difference from those in the case of the regular
network. The difference may be ascribed to the small world character of the
first two types of networks.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Prototypical quadruplet for few-shot class incremental learning
Many modern computer vision algorithms suffer from two major bottlenecks:
scarcity of data and learning new tasks incrementally. While training the model
with new batches of data the model looses it's ability to classify the previous
data judiciously which is termed as catastrophic forgetting. Conventional
methods have tried to mitigate catastrophic forgetting of the previously
learned data while the training at the current session has been compromised.
The state-of-the-art generative replay based approaches use complicated
structures such as generative adversarial network (GAN) to deal with
catastrophic forgetting. Additionally, training a GAN with few samples may lead
to instability. In this work, we present a novel method to deal with these two
major hurdles. Our method identifies a better embedding space with an improved
contrasting loss to make classification more robust. Moreover, our approach is
able to retain previously acquired knowledge in the embedding space even when
trained with new classes. We update previous session class prototypes while
training in such a way that it is able to represent the true class mean. This
is of prime importance as our classification rule is based on the nearest class
mean classification strategy. We have demonstrated our results by showing that
the embedding space remains intact after training the model with new classes.
We showed that our method preformed better than the existing state-of-the-art
algorithms in terms of accuracy across different sessions
Generalized zero-shot learning using generated proxy unseen samples and entropy separation
The recent generative model-driven Generalized Zero-shot Learning (GZSL) techniques overcome the prevailing issue of the model bias towards the seen classes by synthesizing the visual samples of the unseen classes through leveraging the corresponding semantic prototypes. Although such approaches significantly improve the GZSL performance due to data augmentation, they violate the principal assumption of GZSL regarding the unavailability of semantic information of unseen classes during training. In this work, we propose to use a generative model (GAN) for synthesizing the visual proxy samples while strictly adhering to the standard assumptions of the GZSL. The aforementioned proxy samples are generated by exploring the early training regime of the GAN. We hypothesize that such proxy samples can effectively be used to characterize the average entropy of the label distribution of the samples from the unseen classes. Further, we train a classifier on the visual samples from the seen classes and proxy samples using entropy separation criterion such that an average entropy of the label distribution is low and high, respectively, for the visual samples from the seen classes and the proxy samples. Such entropy separation criterion generalizes well during testing where the samples from the unseen classes exhibit higher entropy than the entropy of the samples from the seen classes. Subsequently, low and high entropy samples are classified using supervised learning and ZSL rather than GZSL. We show the superiority of the proposed method by experimenting on AWA1, CUB, HMDB51, and UCF101 datasets
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