27,906 research outputs found

    Distinguishing the opponents in the prisoner dilemma in well-mixed populations

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    Here we study the effects of adopting different strategies against different opponent instead of adopting the same strategy against all of them in the prisoner dilemma structured in well-mixed populations. We consider an evolutionary process in which strategies that provide reproductive success are imitated and players replace one of their worst interactions by the new one. We set individuals in a well-mixed population so that network reciprocity effect is excluded and we analyze both synchronous and asynchronous updates. As a consequence of the replacement rule, we show that mutual cooperation is never destroyed and the initial fraction of mutual cooperation is a lower bound for the level of cooperation. We show by simulation and mean-field analysis that for synchronous update cooperation dominates while for asynchronous update only cooperations associated to the initial mutual cooperations are maintained. As a side effect of the replacement rule, an "implicit punishment" mechanism comes up in a way that exploitations are always neutralized providing evolutionary stability for cooperation

    Density-functional theory investigation of oxygen adsorption at Pd(11N)(N=3,5,7) vicinal surfaces

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    We present a density-functional theory study addressing the on-surface adsorption of oxygen at the Pd(11N) (N =3,5,7) vicinal surfaces, which exhibit (111) steps and (100) terraces of increasing width. We find the binding to be predominantly governed by the local coordination at the adsorption site. This leads to very similar bonding properties at the threefold step sites of all three vicinal surfaces, while the binding at the central fourfold hollow site in the four atomic row terrace of Pd(117) is already very little disturbed by the presence of the neighboring steps.Comment: 9 pages including 4 figures; related publications can be found at http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/th.htm

    Reproductive aspects of Macrobrachium amazonicum (Decapoda: Palaemonidae) in the State of Amapá, Amazon River mouth.

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    Macrobrachium amazonicum is an indigenous prawn vastly distributed in basins of South America, widely exploited by artisanal fisheries in northern and northeastern Brazil and, with great potential for aquaculture. This study aimed to investigate general aspects of population structure and reproductive characteristics (size at first maturity, fecundity and reproductive output) of M. amazonicum from two important areas to artisanal prawn fishing located at the mouth of the Amazon River, State of Amapá. The specimens were captured using 20 handcrafted traps called ?matapi?. A number of 5,179 prawns were captured, 2,975 females and 2,195 males resulting in 1.35:1 female to male ratio. Santana Island and Mazagão Velho showed females predominated in the population. A reproductive peak period was observed from January to April/2009 and in December/2010, coinciding with the period of higher rainfall. The recruitment peak occurred in June and July/2009. Egg-bearing females ranged in size (carapace length) from 11.10 to 29.6 mm. Fecundity increased with female size and reached up to 7,417 eggs. This amount of eggs is considered low if compared with other Macrobrachium estuarine species. Mean egg volume increased gradually from 0.121 to 0.24 mm3 during embryogenesis, representing 68.5% of overall increase from Stage I to Stage III. Eggs of M. amazonicum are small; this is typical for Macrobrachium species, which depends on brackish water to complete the larval development. Irrespective of female size, reproductive output of M. amazonicum varied between 4.8 and 21.85% of their body weight into eggs production

    Estresse salino em variedades de mamão (Carica Papaya L.).

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    Nos Estados da Bahia e do Espírito Santo, principais regiões produtoras de mamão do Brasil, essa cultura está concentrada no ecossistema dos Tabuleiros Costeiros, onde são registradas, em alguns meses, precipitações inferiores à demanda. Assim, para que o mamoeiro alcance altas produtividades, o emprego de irrigações suplementares constitui-se em uma prática importante e imprescindível. Porém, um problema que se tem verificado nessas regiões é a qualidade da água dos poços, açudes e rios, que nem sempre é adequada ao crescimento normal das plantas, em razão, principalmente, da relativa alta concentração de sais. Em geral, a inibição do crescimento das plantas sob condições salinas é conseqüência de seus efeitos osmóticos, que pode induzir condições de estresse hídrico à planta e, ou, de efeitos dos íons Na+ e Cl-, que podem acarretar toxidez direta e desordens nutricionais (Munns, 2002). Apesar da importância desse problema, aspectos relacionados à sensibilidade do mamoeiro ao estresse salino não tem sido merecedores de estudos. Assim, o presente trabalho objetiva avaliar a resposta diferencial de variedades de mamoeiro à salinidade.pdf 207

    Yield response factor (KY) for winter corn crop in the region of Dourados, MS, Brazil.

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    Made available in DSpace on 2019-11-13T00:45:00Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 36912.pdf: 920754 bytes, checksum: 0eb5360be48960aa506fd9665207a234 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2019bitstream/item/204588/1/36912.pd

    Role-separating ordering in social dilemmas controlled by topological frustration

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    "Three is a crowd" is an old proverb that applies as much to social interactions, as it does to frustrated configurations in statistical physics models. Accordingly, social relations within a triangle deserve special attention. With this motivation, we explore the impact of topological frustration on the evolutionary dynamics of the snowdrift game on a triangular lattice. This topology provides an irreconcilable frustration, which prevents anti-coordination of competing strategies that would be needed for an optimal outcome of the game. By using different strategy updating protocols, we observe complex spatial patterns in dependence on payoff values that are reminiscent to a honeycomb-like organization, which helps to minimize the negative consequence of the topological frustration. We relate the emergence of these patterns to the microscopic dynamics of the evolutionary process, both by means of mean-field approximations and Monte Carlo simulations. For comparison, we also consider the same evolutionary dynamics on the square lattice, where of course the topological frustration is absent. However, with the deletion of diagonal links of the triangular lattice, we can gradually bridge the gap to the square lattice. Interestingly, in this case the level of cooperation in the system is a direct indicator of the level of topological frustration, thus providing a method to determine frustration levels in an arbitrary interaction network.Comment: 9 two-column pages, 9 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review
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