1,281 research outputs found
Look before you leap: a confidence-based method for selecting species criticality while avoiding negative populations in -leaping
The stochastic simulation algorithm was introduced by Gillespie and in a different form by Kurtz. There have been many attempts at accelerating the algorithm without deviating from the behavior of the simulated system. The crux of the explicit -leaping procedure is the use of Poisson random variables to approximate the number of occurrences of each type of reaction event during a carefully selected time period, . This method is acceptable providing the leap condition, that no propensity function changes “significantly” during any time-step, is met. Using this method there is a possibility that species numbers can, artificially, become negative. Several recent papers have demonstrated methods that avoid this situation. One such method classifies, as critical, those reactions in danger of sending species populations negative. At most, one of these critical reactions is allowed to occur in the next time-step. We argue that the criticality of a reactant species and its dependent reaction channels should be related to the probability of the species number becoming negative. This way only reactions that, if fired, produce a high probability of driving a reactant population negative are labeled critical. The number of firings of more reaction channels can be approximated using Poisson random variables thus speeding up the simulation while maintaining the accuracy. In implementing this revised method of criticality selection we make use of the probability distribution from which the random variable describing the change in species number is drawn. We give several numerical examples to demonstrate the effectiveness of our new metho
Fourier spectral methods for fractional-in-space reaction-diffusion equations
Fractional differential equations are becoming increasingly used as a powerful modelling approach for understanding the many aspects of nonlocality and spatial heterogeneity. However, the numerical approximation of these models is computationally demanding and imposes a number of computational constraints. In this paper, we introduce Fourier spectral methods as an attractive and easy-to-code alternative for the integration of fractional-in-space reactiondiffusion equations. The main advantages of the proposed schemes is that they yield a fully diagonal representation of the fractional operator, with increased accuracy and efficiency when compared to low-order counterparts, and a completely straightforward extension to two and three spatial dimensions. Our approach is show-cased by solving several problems of practical interest, including the fractional Allen–Cahn, FitzHugh–Nagumo and Gray–Scott models,together with an analysis of the properties of these systems in terms of the fractional power of the underlying Laplacian operator
Runge-Kutta methods for third order weak approximation of SDEs with multidimensional additive noise
A new class of third order Runge-Kutta methods for stochastic differential
equations with additive noise is introduced. In contrast to Platen's method,
which to the knowledge of the author has been up to now the only known third
order Runge-Kutta scheme for weak approximation, the new class of methods
affords less random variable evaluations and is also applicable to SDEs with
multidimensional noise. Order conditions up to order three are calculated and
coefficients of a four stage third order method are given. This method has
deterministic order four and minimized error constants, and needs in addition
less function evaluations than the method of Platen. Applied to some examples,
the new method is compared numerically with Platen's method and some well known
second order methods and yields very promising results.Comment: Two further examples added, small correction
Fractional diffusion models of cardiac electrical propagation: role of structural heterogeneity in dispersion of repolarization
Structural heterogeneity constitutes one of the main substrates influencing impulse propagation in living tissues. In cardiac muscle, improved understanding on its role is key to advancing our interpretation of cell-to-cell coupling, and how tissue structure modulates electrical propagation and arrhythmogenesis in the intact and diseased heart. We propose fractional diffusion models as a novel mathematical description of structurally heterogeneous excitable media, as a mean of representing the modulation of the total electric field by the secondary electrical sources associated with tissue inhomogeneities. Our results, validated against in-vivo human recordings and experimental data of different animal species, indicate that structural heterogeneity underlies many relevant characteristics of cardiac propagation, including the shortening of action potential duration along the activation pathway, and the progressive modulation by premature beats of spatial patterns of dispersion of repolarization. The proposed approach may also have important implications in other research fields involving excitable complex media
Stochastic B-series analysis of iterated Taylor methods
For stochastic implicit Taylor methods that use an iterative scheme to
compute their numerical solution, stochastic B--series and corresponding growth
functions are constructed. From these, convergence results based on the order
of the underlying Taylor method, the choice of the iteration method, the
predictor and the number of iterations, for It\^o and Stratonovich SDEs, and
for weak as well as strong convergence are derived. As special case, also the
application of Taylor methods to ODEs is considered. The theory is supported by
numerical experiments
Gender Equality in Primary Schools in Sub-Saharan Africa: Review and Analysis
Developing countries like those in Africa’s Sub-Saharan region struggle with gender inequality issues in primary schools, an impediment that keeps these countries from progressing economically as well as socially. Despite the struggle, international awareness coupled with continuous initiatives of various international groups like United Nations Girls’ Education Initiative, UNESCO’s Education for All, plus other government organizations, find concrete ways to permanently and effectively address gender disparity in education
Shining Light on Modifications of Gravity
Many modifications of gravity introduce new scalar degrees of freedom, and in
such theories matter fields typically couple to an effective metric that
depends on both the true metric of spacetime and on the scalar field and its
derivatives. Scalar field contributions to the effective metric can be
classified as conformal and disformal. Disformal terms introduce gradient
couplings between scalar fields and the energy momentum tensor of other matter
fields, and cannot be constrained by fifth force experiments because the
effects of these terms are trivial around static non-relativistic sources. The
use of high-precision, low-energy photon experiments to search for conformally
coupled scalar fields, called axion-like particles, is well known. In this
article we show that these experiments are also constraining for disformal
scalar field theories, and are particularly important because of the difficulty
of constraining these couplings with other laboratory experiments.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures. v2: Matches version accepted by JCAP;
additional discussion of the strong coupling scale. Conclusions unchange
DBI Galileon and Late time acceleration of the universe
We consider 1+3 dimensional maximally symmetric Minkowski brane embedded in a
1+4 dimensional maximally symmetric Minkowski background. The resulting 1+3
dimensional effective field theory is of DBI (Dirac-Born-Infeld) Galileon type.
We use this model to study the late time acceleration of the universe. We study
the deviation of the model from the concordance \Lambda CDM behaviour. Finally
we put constraints on the model parameters using various observational data.Comment: 16 pages, 7 eps figures, Latex Style, new references added, corrected
missing reference
Constraining Galileon inflation
In this short paper, we present constraints on the Galileon inflationary model from the CMB bispectrum. We employ a principal-component analysis of the independent degrees of freedom constrained by data and apply this to the WMAP 9-year data to constrain the free parameters of the model. A simple Bayesian comparison establishes that support for the Galileon model from bispectrum data is at best weak
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