158 research outputs found
Author-Based Analysis of Conference versus Journal Publication in Computer Science
Conference publications in computer science (CS) have attracted scholarly
attention due to their unique status as a main research outlet unlike other
science fields where journals are dominantly used for communicating research
findings. One frequent research question has been how different conference and
journal publications are, considering a paper as a unit of analysis. This study
takes an author-based approach to analyze publishing patterns of 517,763
scholars who have ever published both in CS conferences and journals for the
last 57 years, as recorded in DBLP. The analysis shows that the majority of CS
scholars tend to make their scholarly debut, publish more papers, and
collaborate with more coauthors in conferences than in journals. Importantly,
conference papers seem to serve as a distinct channel of scholarly
communication, not a mere preceding step to journal publications: coauthors and
title words of authors across conferences and journals tend not to overlap
much. This study corroborates findings of previous studies on this topic from a
distinctive perspective and suggests that conference authorship in CS calls for
more special attention from scholars and administrators outside CS who have
focused on journal publications to mine authorship data and evaluate scholarly
performance
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
Phase transition and selection in a four-species cyclic Lotka-Volterra model
We study a four species ecological system with cyclic dominance whose
individuals are distributed on a square lattice. Randomly chosen individuals
migrate to one of the neighboring sites if it is empty or invade this site if
occupied by their prey. The cyclic dominance maintains the coexistence of all
the four species if the concentration of vacant sites is lower than a threshold
value. Above the treshold, a symmetry breaking ordering occurs via growing
domains containing only two neutral species inside. These two neutral species
can protect each other from the external invaders (predators) and extend their
common territory. According to our Monte Carlo simulations the observed phase
transition is equivalent to those found in spreading models with two equivalent
absorbing states although the present model has continuous sets of absorbing
states with different portions of the two neutral species. The selection
mechanism yielding symmetric phases is related to the domain growth process
whith wide boundaries where the four species coexist.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Parallel ecological networks in ecosystems
In ecosystems, species interact with other species directly and through abiotic factors in multiple ways, often forming complex networks of various types of ecological interaction. Out of this suite of interactions, predator–prey interactions have received most attention. The resulting food webs, however, will always operate simultaneously with networks based on other types of ecological interaction, such as through the activities of ecosystem engineers or mutualistic interactions. Little is known about how to classify, organize and quantify these other ecological networks and their mutual interplay. The aim of this paper is to provide new and testable ideas on how to understand and model ecosystems in which many different types of ecological interaction operate simultaneously. We approach this problem by first identifying six main types of interaction that operate within ecosystems, of which food web interactions are one. Then, we propose that food webs are structured among two main axes of organization: a vertical (classic) axis representing trophic position and a new horizontal ‘ecological stoichiometry’ axis representing decreasing palatability of plant parts and detritus for herbivores and detrivores and slower turnover times. The usefulness of these new ideas is then explored with three very different ecosystems as test cases: temperate intertidal mudflats; temperate short grass prairie; and tropical savannah
Nonextensivity of the cyclic Lattice Lotka Volterra model
We numerically show that the Lattice Lotka-Volterra model, when realized on a
square lattice support, gives rise to a {\it finite} production, per unit time,
of the nonextensive entropy . This finiteness only occurs for for the growth mode
(growing droplet), and for for the one (growing stripe). This
strong evidence of nonextensivity is consistent with the spontaneous emergence
of local domains of identical particles with fractal boundaries and competing
interactions. Such direct evidence is for the first time exhibited for a
many-body system which, at the mean field level, is conservative.Comment: Latex, 6 pages, 5 figure
Oscillations and dynamics in a two-dimensional prey-predator system
Using Monte Carlo simulations we study two-dimensional prey-predator systems.
Measuring the variance of densities of prey and predators on the triangular
lattice and on the lattice with eight neighbours, we conclude that temporal
oscillations of these densities vanish in the thermodynamic limit. This result
suggests that such oscillations do not exist in two-dimensional models, at
least when driven by local dynamics. Depending on the control parameter, the
model could be either in an active or in an absorbing phase, which are
separated by the critical point. The critical behaviour of this model is
studied using the dynamical Monte Carlo method. This model has two dynamically
nonsymmetric absorbing states. In principle both absorbing states can be used
for the analysis of the critical point. However, dynamical simulations which
start from the unstable absorbing state suffer from metastable-like effects,
which sometimes renders the method inefficient.Comment: 7 eps figures, Phys.Rev.E - in pres
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