4,215 research outputs found
Overcoming Problems in the Measurement of Biological Complexity
In a genetic algorithm, fluctuations of the entropy of a genome over time are
interpreted as fluctuations of the information that the genome's organism is
storing about its environment, being this reflected in more complex organisms.
The computation of this entropy presents technical problems due to the small
population sizes used in practice. In this work we propose and test an
alternative way of measuring the entropy variation in a population by means of
algorithmic information theory, where the entropy variation between two
generational steps is the Kolmogorov complexity of the first step conditioned
to the second one. As an example application of this technique, we report
experimental differences in entropy evolution between systems in which sexual
reproduction is present or absent.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Quantifying human mobility resilience to extreme events using geo-located social media data
Participation of Women in the Notarial Public Deed of the 16th Century. From the Constriction of the Marital Licence to the Fullness of Widowhood
This study intends to analyse the participation of the married woman
and the widow in the notarial public deed of the 16th century, in Spain, in
light of the notarial forms and treatises of the time and the process itself of
executing a notarial public deed. Visigothic Law would gather, to certain
extent, Roman limitations and the openness brought by the Christian
doctrine, resulting in the different legal systems of High Medieval times,
when the married woman needed a licence from her husband in order to act.
Spanish Law 56 of Toro would regulate the marital licence as a general
system and compulsory requirement for the valid intervention of the married
woman. In the beginning of the 16th century, not a few women executed
notarial deeds and wrote royal letters related to registering as residents,
returning properties and shortening litigations
Violent extremist group ecologies under stress
Violent extremist groups are currently making intensive use of Internet fora for recruitment to terrorism. These fora are under constant scrutiny by security agencies, private vigilante groups, and hackers, who sometimes shut them down with cybernetic attacks. However, there is a lack of experimental and formal understanding of the recruitment dynamics of online extremist fora and the effect of strategies to control them.Here, the authors utilise data on ten extremist fora that we collected for four years to develop a data-driven mathematical model that is the first attempt to measure whether (and how) these external attacks induce extremist fora to self-regulate. The results suggest that an increase in the number of groups targeted for attack causes an exponential increase in the cost of enforcement and an exponential decrease in its effectiveness. Thus, a policy to occasionally attack large groups can be very efficient for limiting violent output from these fora.Authored by Manuel Cebrian, Manuel R. Torres, Ramon Huerta and James H. Fowler
Dynamic energy budget approach to evaluate antibiotic effects on biofilms
Quantifying the action of antibiotics on biofilms is essential to devise
therapies against chronic infections. Biofilms are bacterial communities
attached to moist surfaces, sheltered from external aggressions by a polymeric
matrix. Coupling a dynamic energy budget based description of cell metabolism
to surrounding concentration fields, we are able to approximate survival curves
measured for different antibiotics. We reproduce numerically stratified
distributions of cell types within the biofilm and introduce ways to
incorporate different resistance mechanisms. Qualitative predictions follow
that are in agreement with experimental observations, such as higher survival
rates of cells close to the substratum when employing antibiotics targeting
active cells or enhanced polymer production when antibiotics are administered.
The current computational model enables validation and hypothesis testing when
developing therapies.Comment: to appear in Communications in Nonlinear Science and Numerical
Simulatio
Measuring and Optimizing Cultural Markets
Social influence has been shown to create significant unpredictability in
cultural markets, providing one potential explanation why experts routinely
fail at predicting commercial success of cultural products. To counteract the
difficulty of making accurate predictions, "measure and react" strategies have
been advocated but finding a concrete strategy that scales for very large
markets has remained elusive so far. Here we propose a "measure and optimize"
strategy based on an optimization policy that uses product quality, appeal, and
social influence to maximize expected profits in the market at each decision
point. Our computational experiments show that our policy leverages social
influence to produce significant performance benefits for the market, while our
theoretical analysis proves that our policy outperforms in expectation any
policy not displaying social information. Our results contrast with earlier
work which focused on showing the unpredictability and inequalities created by
social influence. Not only do we show for the first time that dynamically
showing consumers positive social information under our policy increases the
expected performance of the seller in cultural markets. We also show that, in
reasonable settings, our policy does not introduce significant unpredictability
and identifies "blockbusters". Overall, these results shed new light on the
nature of social influence and how it can be leveraged for the benefits of the
market
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