14,634 research outputs found
Coevolution of teaching activity promotes cooperation
Evolutionary games are studied where the teaching activity of players can
evolve in time. Initially all players following either the cooperative or
defecting strategy are distributed on a square lattice. The rate of strategy
adoption is determined by the payoff difference and a teaching activity
characterizing the donor's capability to enforce its strategy on the opponent.
Each successful strategy adoption process is accompanied with an increase in
the donor's teaching activity. By applying an optimum value of the increment
this simple mechanism spontaneously creates relevant inhomogeneities in the
teaching activities that support the maintenance of cooperation for both the
prisoner's dilemma and the snowdrift game.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in New Journal of
Physic
Engaging Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) elders in palliative care innovation through the Learning Alliance in Palliative and End of Life Care (LAPCEL) methodology
Description to be added.Cannot be left empt
Time evolution of damage under variable ranges of load transfer
We study the time evolution of damage in a fiber bundle model in which the
range of interaction of fibers varies through an adjustable stress transfer
function recently introduced. We find that the lifetime of the material
exhibits a crossover from mean field to short range behavior as in the static
case. Numerical calculations showed that the value at which the transition
takes place depends on the system's disorder. Finally, we have performed a
microscopic analysis of the failure process. Our results confirm that the
growth dynamics of the largest crack is radically different in the two limiting
regimes of load transfer during the first stages of breaking.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, revtex4 styl
A model for cascading failures in complex networks
Large but rare cascades triggered by small initial shocks are present in most
of the infrastructure networks. Here we present a simple model for cascading
failures based on the dynamical redistribution of the flow on the network. We
show that the breakdown of a single node is sufficient to collapse the
efficiency of the entire system if the node is among the ones with largest
load. This is particularly important for real-world networks with an highly
hetereogeneous distribution of loads as the Internet and electrical power
grids.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Beyond the Colours: Discovering Hidden Diversity in the Nymphalidae of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico through DNA Barcoding
BACKGROUND: Recent studies have demonstrated the utility of DNA barcoding in the discovery of overlooked species and in the connection of immature and adult stages. In this study, we use DNA barcoding to examine diversity patterns in 121 species of Nymphalidae from the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. Our results suggest the presence of cryptic species in 8 of these 121 taxa. As well, the reference database derived from the analysis of adult specimens allowed the identification of nymphalid caterpillars providing new details on host plant use. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We gathered DNA barcode sequences from 857 adult Nymphalidae representing 121 different species. This total includes four species (Adelpha iphiclus, Adelpha malea, Hamadryas iphtime and Taygetis laches) that were initially overlooked because of their close morphological similarity to other species. The barcode results showed that each of the 121 species possessed a diagnostic array of barcode sequences. In addition, there was evidence of cryptic taxa; seven species included two barcode clusters showing more than 2% sequence divergence while one species included three clusters. All 71 nymphalid caterpillars were identified to a species level by their sequence congruence to adult sequences. These caterpillars represented 16 species, and included Hamadryas julitta, an endemic species from the Yucatan Peninsula whose larval stages and host plant (Dalechampia schottii, also endemic to the Yucatan Peninsula) were previously unknown. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This investigation has revealed overlooked species in a well-studied museum collection of nymphalid butterflies and suggests that there is a substantial incidence of cryptic species that await full characterization. The utility of barcoding in the rapid identification of caterpillars also promises to accelerate the assembly of information on life histories, a particularly important advance for hyperdiverse tropical insect assemblages
Emergence of influential spreaders in modified rumor models
The burst in the use of online social networks over the last decade has
provided evidence that current rumor spreading models miss some fundamental
ingredients in order to reproduce how information is disseminated. In
particular, recent literature has revealed that these models fail to reproduce
the fact that some nodes in a network have an influential role when it comes to
spread a piece of information. In this work, we introduce two mechanisms with
the aim of filling the gap between theoretical and experimental results. The
first model introduces the assumption that spreaders are not always active
whereas the second model considers the possibility that an ignorant is not
interested in spreading the rumor. In both cases, results from numerical
simulations show a higher adhesion to real data than classical rumor spreading
models. Our results shed some light on the mechanisms underlying the spreading
of information and ideas in large social systems and pave the way for more
realistic diffusion models.Comment: 14 Pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of
Statistical Physic
Evaluating the incidence of hydrological processes during site formation through orientation analysis. A case study of the middle Palaeolithic Lakeland site of Neumark-Nord 2 (Germany)
Lacustrine localitieswere attractive environments for Palaeolithic hominins, since they provide a large and broad spectrumof resources. Moreover, they are excellent archives that allowfor high-resolution environmental, chronological and archaeological analyses. However, these deposits are often subject to complex formation and postdepositional factors, including water-related processes. Evaluating the influence of hydrological processes in site formation is thus essential to more accurately reconstruct the duration, intensity and types of hominin behaviour within these environments. In this paperwe present the orientation analysis of archaeological material from the Last Interglacial site Neumark-Nord 2, Germany. Orientation analysis was done using GIS to calculate the orientation of artefact from digital plans of the excavation surface, which were subsequently tested using circular statistics. The results of the orientation analysis are compared with a hydrological model to check the relation between preferred orientations and reconstructed areas of water flow and accumulation. Results suggest that low-energy hydrological processes could have affected certain areas of the find-bearing deposits at Neumark-Nord 2 but, overall, there is no evidence for either high-energy hydrological processes or a significant movement of parts of the archaeological assemblage.The project “Interglacial landscapes and Neanderthal adaptations in the Neumark-Nord region (Saxony-Anhalt)” is funded by the Deutsche Forchungsgemeinschaft (DFG) (GA 683/9-1)
Fracture model with variable range of interaction
We introduce a fiber bundle model where the interaction among fibers is
modeled by an adjustable stress-transfer function which can interpolate between
the two limiting cases of load redistribution, the global and the local load
sharing schemes. By varying the range of interaction several features of the
model are numerically studied and a crossover from mean field to short range
behavior is obtained. The properties of the two regimes and the emergence of
the crossover in between are explored by numerically studying the dependence of
the ultimate strength of the material on the system size, the distribution of
avalanches of breakings, and of the cluster sizes of broken fibers. Finally, we
analyze the moments of the cluster size distributions to accurately determine
the value at which the crossover is observed.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. Two columns revtex format. Final version to be
published in Phys. Rev.
Middle Pleistocene protein sequences from the rhinoceros genus Stephanorhinus and the phylogeny of extant and extinct Middle/Late Pleistocene Rhinocerotidae
Background: Ancient protein sequences are increasingly used to elucidate the phylogenetic relationships between extinct and extant mammalian taxa. Here, we apply these recent developments to Middle Pleistocene bone specimens of the rhinoceros genus Stephanorhinus. No biomolecular sequence data is currently available for this genus, leaving phylogenetic hypotheses on its evolutionary relationships to extant and extinct rhinoceroses untested. Furthermore, recent phylogenies based on Rhinocerotidae (partial or complete) mitochondrial DNA sequences differ in the placement of the Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis). Therefore, studies utilising ancient protein sequences from Middle Pleistocene contexts have the potential to provide further insights into the phylogenetic relationships between extant and extinct species, including Stephanorhinus and Dicerorhinus.
Methods: ZooMS screening (zooarchaeology by mass spectrometry) was performed on several Late and Middle Pleistocene specimens from the genus Stephanorhinus, subsequently followed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to obtain ancient protein sequences from a Middle Pleistocene Stephanorhinus specimen.We performed parallel analysis on a Late Pleistocene woolly rhinoceros specimen and extant species of rhinoceroses, resulting in the availability of protein sequence data for five extant species and two extinct genera. Phylogenetic analysis additionally included all extant Perissodactyla genera (Equus, Tapirus), and was conducted using Bayesian (MrBayes) and maximum-likelihood (RAxML) methods.
Results: Various ancient proteins were identified in both the Middle and Late Pleistocene rhinoceros samples. Protein degradation and proteome complexity are consistent with an endogenous origin of the identified proteins. Phylogenetic analysis of informative proteins resolved the Perissodactyla phylogeny in agreement with previous studies in regards to the placement of the families Equidae, Tapiridae, and Rhinocerotidae. Stephanorhinus is shown to be most closely related to the genera Coelodonta and Dicerorhinus. The protein sequence data further places the Sumatran rhino in a clade together with the genus Rhinoceros, opposed to forming a clade with the black and white rhinoceros species.
Discussion: The first biomolecular dataset available for Stephanorhinus places this genus together with the extinct genus Coelodonta and the extant genus Dicerorhinus. This is in agreement with morphological studies, although we are unable to resolve the order of divergence between these genera based on the protein sequences available. Our data supports the placement of the genus Dicerorhinus in a clade together with extant Rhinoceros species. Finally, the availability of protein sequence data for both extinct European rhinoceros genera allows future investigations into their geographic distribution and extinction chronologies.The project “Hominin subsistence strategies during the Middle Pleistocene in Scho¨ningen” is a co-operation between Monrepos Archaeological Research Centre and Museum for Human Behavioural Evolution (RGZM), Johannes Gutenberg-Universita¨t Mainz, and the Niedersa¨chsisches Landesamt fu¨r Denkmalpflege, supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (GA 683/9-1). This research was supported financially by the Max Planck Society. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript
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