1,084 research outputs found
Segregation process and phase transition in cyclic predator-prey models with even number of species
We study a spatial cyclic predator-prey model with an even number of species
(for n=4, 6, and 8) that allows the formation of two defective alliances
consisting of the even and odd label species. The species are distributed on
the sites of a square lattice. The evolution of spatial distribution is
governed by iteration of two elementary processes on neighboring sites chosen
randomly: if the sites are occupied by a predator-prey pair then the predator
invades the prey's site; otherwise the species exchange their site with a
probability . For low values a self-organizing pattern is maintained by
cyclic invasions. If exceeds a threshold value then two types of domains
grow up that formed by the odd and even label species, respectively. Monte
Carlo simulations indicate the blocking of this segregation process within a
range of X for n=8.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to be appear in Phys. Rev.
Anti-melanocortin-4 receptor autoantibodies in obesity
Background: The melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is part of an important pathway regulating energy balance. Here we report the existence of autoantibodies (autoAbs) against the MC4R in sera of obese patients. Methods: The autoAbs were detected after screening of 216 patients' sera by using direct and inhibition ELISA with an N-terminal sequence of the MC4R. Binding to the native MC4R was evaluated by flow cytometry and pharmacological effects by measuring adenylyl cyclase activity. Results: Positive results in all tests were obtained in patients with overweight or obesity (prevalence: 3.6%) but not in normal weight patients. The selective binding properties of anti-MC4R autoAbs were confirmed by surface plasmon resonance and by immunoprecipitation with the native MC4R. Finally it was demonstrated that these autoAbs increased food intake in rats after passive transfer via intracerebroventricular injection. Conclusion: These observations suggest that inhibitory anti-MC4R autoAbs might contribute to the development of obesity in a small subpopulation of patients
State Differentiation by Transient Truncation in Coupled Threshold Dynamics
Dynamics with a threshold input--output relation commonly exist in gene,
signal-transduction, and neural networks. Coupled dynamical systems of such
threshold elements are investigated, in an effort to find differentiation of
elements induced by the interaction. Through global diffusive coupling, novel
states are found to be generated that are not the original attractor of
single-element threshold dynamics, but are sustained through the interaction
with the elements located at the original attractor. This stabilization of the
novel state(s) is not related to symmetry breaking, but is explained as the
truncation of transient trajectories to the original attractor due to the
coupling. Single-element dynamics with winding transient trajectories located
at a low-dimensional manifold and having turning points are shown to be
essential to the generation of such novel state(s) in a coupled system.
Universality of this mechanism for the novel state generation and its relevance
to biological cell differentiation are briefly discussed.Comment: 8 pages. Phys. Rev. E. in pres
Phase transition in a spatial Lotka-Volterra model
Spatial evolution is investigated in a simulated system of nine competing and
mutating bacterium strains, which mimics the biochemical war among bacteria
capable of producing two different bacteriocins (toxins) at most. Random
sequential dynamics on a square lattice is governed by very symmetrical
transition rules for neighborhood invasion of sensitive strains by killers,
killers by resistants, and resistants by by sensitives. The community of the
nine possible toxicity/resistance types undergoes a critical phase transition
as the uniform transmutation rates between the types decreases below a critical
value above which all the nine types of strain coexist with equal
frequencies. Passing the critical mutation rate from above, the system
collapses into one of the three topologically identical states, each consisting
of three strain types. Of the three final states each accrues with equal
probability and all three maintain themselves in a self-organizing polydomain
structure via cyclic invasions. Our Monte Carlo simulations support that this
symmetry breaking transition belongs to the universality class of the
three-state Potts model.Comment: 4 page
Emergence of synchronization induced by the interplay between two prisoner's dilemma games with volunteering in small-world networks
We studied synchronization between prisoner's dilemma games with voluntary
participation in two Newman-Watts small-world networks. It was found that there
are three kinds of synchronization: partial phase synchronization, total phase
synchronization and complete synchronization, for varied coupling factors.
Besides, two games can reach complete synchronization for the large enough
coupling factor. We also discussed the effect of coupling factor on the
amplitude of oscillation of density.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Equilibrium states for potentials with \sup\phi - \inf\phi < \htop(f)
In the context of smooth interval maps, we study an inducing scheme approach
to prove existence and uniqueness of equilibrium states for potentials
with he `bounded range' condition \sup \phi - \inf \phi < \htop, first used
by Hofbauer and Keller. We compare our results to Hofbauer and Keller's use of
Perron-Frobenius operators. We demonstrate that this `bounded range' condition
on the potential is important even if the potential is H\"older continuous. We
also prove analyticity of the pressure in this context.Comment: Added Lemma 6 to deal with the disparity between leading eigenvalues
and operator norms. Added extra references and corrected some typo
Oscillatory behaviour in a lattice prey-predator system
Using Monte Carlo simulations we study a lattice model of a prey-predator
system. We show that in the three-dimensional model populations of preys and
predators exhibit coherent periodic oscillations but such a behaviour is absent
in lower-dimensional models. Finite-size analysis indicate that amplitude of
these oscillations is finite even in the thermodynamic limit. In our opinion,
this is the first example of a microscopic model with stochastic dynamics which
exhibits oscillatory behaviour without any external driving force. We suggest
that oscillations in our model are induced by some kind of stochastic
resonance.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, Phys.Rev.E (Nov. 1999
Defensive alliances in spatial models of cyclical population interactions
As a generalization of the 3-strategy Rock-Scissors-Paper game dynamics in
space, cyclical interaction models of six mutating species are studied on a
square lattice, in which each species is supposed to have two dominant, two
subordinated and a neutral interacting partner. Depending on their interaction
topologies, these systems can be classified into four (isomorphic) groups
exhibiting significantly different behaviors as a function of mutation rate. On
three out of four cases three (or four) species form defensive alliances which
maintain themselves in a self-organizing polydomain structure via cyclic
invasions. Varying the mutation rate this mechanism results in an ordering
phenomenon analogous to that of magnetic Ising model.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Evolution Equation of Phenotype Distribution: General Formulation and Application to Error Catastrophe
An equation describing the evolution of phenotypic distribution is derived
using methods developed in statistical physics. The equation is solved by using
the singular perturbation method, and assuming that the number of bases in the
genetic sequence is large. Applying the equation to the mutation-selection
model by Eigen provides the critical mutation rate for the error catastrophe.
Phenotypic fluctuation of clones (individuals sharing the same gene) is
introduced into this evolution equation. With this formalism, it is found that
the critical mutation rate is sometimes increased by the phenotypic
fluctuations, i.e., noise can enhance robustness of a fitted state to mutation.
Our formalism is systematic and general, while approximations to derive more
tractable evolution equations are also discussed.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figure
Phase transitions and volunteering in spatial public goods games
Cooperative behavior among unrelated individuals in human and animal
societies represents a most intriguing puzzle to scientists in various
disciplines. Here we present a simple yet effective mechanism promoting
cooperation under full anonymity by allowing for voluntary participation in
public goods games. This natural extension leads to rock--scissors--paper type
cyclic dominance of the three strategies cooperate, defect and loner i.e. those
unwilling to participate in the public enterprise. In spatial settings with
players arranged on a regular lattice this results in interesting dynamical
properties and intriguing spatio-temporal patterns. In particular, variations
of the value of the public good leads to transitions between one-, two- and
three-strategy states which are either in the class of directed percolation or
show interesting analogies to Ising-type models. Although volunteering is
incapable of stabilizing cooperation, it efficiently prevents successful
spreading of selfish behavior and enables cooperators to persist at substantial
levels.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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