460 research outputs found
Agent-Based Modeling of Locust Foraging and Social Behavior
Locust swarms contain millions of individuals and are a threat to agriculture on four continents. At low densities, locusts are solitary foragers; however, when crowded, they undergo an epigenetic phase change to a gregarious state in which they are attracted to other locusts. It is believed that this is an evolutionary adaptation that optimizes the seeking of resources. We have developed an agent-based model based on the solitary-gregarious transition and foraging behaviors due to hunger levels. A novel feature of our model is that it treats food resources as a dynamic variable in the environment. We discuss how social interaction strategies influence the efficiency of foraging and the effect of heterogeneous distributions of resources on the solitary-gregarious phase transitions
On the Chow and cohomology rings of moduli spaces of stable curves
In this paper, we ask: for which is the rational Chow or cohomology
ring of generated by tautological classes? This
question has been fully answered in genus by Keel (the Chow and cohomology
rings are tautological for all ) and genus by Belorousski (the rings are
tautological if and only if ). For , work of van Zelm
shows the Chow and cohomology rings are not tautological once ,
leaving finitely many open cases. Here, we prove that the Chow and cohomology
rings of are isomorphic and generated by
tautological classes for and and for and
. For such , this implies that the tautological ring is
Gorenstein and has polynomial point count.Comment: 42 pages, comments welcome
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