94 research outputs found
Inferring processes of cultural transmission: the critical role of rare variants in distinguishing neutrality from novelty biases
Neutral evolution assumes that there are no selective forces distinguishing
different variants in a population. Despite this striking assumption, many
recent studies have sought to assess whether neutrality can provide a good
description of different episodes of cultural change. One approach has been to
test whether neutral predictions are consistent with observed progeny
distributions, recording the number of variants that have produced a given
number of new instances within a specified time interval: a classic example is
the distribution of baby names. Using an overlapping generations model we show
that these distributions consist of two phases: a power law phase with a
constant exponent of -3/2, followed by an exponential cut-off for variants with
very large numbers of progeny. Maximum likelihood estimations of the model
parameters provide a direct way to establish whether observed empirical
patterns are consistent with neutral evolution. We apply our approach to a
complete data set of baby names from Australia. Crucially we show that analyses
based on only the most popular variants, as is often the case in studies of
cultural evolution, can provide misleading evidence for underlying transmission
hypotheses. While neutrality provides a plausible description of progeny
distributions of abundant variants, rare variants deviate from neutrality.
Further, we develop a simulation framework that allows for the detection of
alternative cultural transmission processes. We show that anti-novelty bias is
able to replicate the complete progeny distribution of the Australian data set
Translucent windows: How uncertainty in competitive interactions impacts detection of community pattern
Trait variation and similarity among coexisting species can provide a window
into the mechanisms that maintain their coexistence. Recent theoretical
explorations suggest that competitive interactions will lead to groups, or
clusters, of species with similar traits. However, theoretical predictions
typically assume complete knowledge of the map between competition and measured
traits. These assumptions limit the plausible application of these patterns for
inferring competitive interactions in nature. Here we relax these restrictions
and find that the clustering pattern is robust to contributions of unknown or
unobserved niche axes. However, it may not be visible unless measured traits
are close proxies for niche strategies. We conclude that patterns along single
niche axes may reveal properties of interspecific competition in nature, but
detecting these patterns requires natural history expertise firmly tying traits
to niches.Comment: Main text: 18 pages, 6 figures. Appendices: A-G, 6 supplementary
figures. This is the peer reviewed version of the article of the same title
which has been accepted for publication at Ecology Letters. This article may
be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and
Conditions for Self-Archivin
Non-Perturbative Tachyon Potential from the Wilsonian Renormalization Group
The derivative expansion of the Wilsonian renormalization group generates
additional terms in the effective beta-functions not present in the
perturbative approach. Applied to the nonlinear sigma model, to lowest order
the vanishing of the beta-function for the tachyon field generates an equation
analogous to that found in open string field theory. Although the nonlinear
term depends on the cut-off function, this arbitrariness can be removed by a
rescaling of the tachyon field.Comment: 6 pages, further references adde
PhylOTU: a high-throughput procedure quantifies microbial community diversity and resolves novel taxa from metagenomic data.
Microbial diversity is typically characterized by clustering ribosomal RNA (SSU-rRNA) sequences into operational taxonomic units (OTUs). Targeted sequencing of environmental SSU-rRNA markers via PCR may fail to detect OTUs due to biases in priming and amplification. Analysis of shotgun sequenced environmental DNA, known as metagenomics, avoids amplification bias but generates fragmentary, non-overlapping sequence reads that cannot be clustered by existing OTU-finding methods. To circumvent these limitations, we developed PhylOTU, a computational workflow that identifies OTUs from metagenomic SSU-rRNA sequence data through the use of phylogenetic principles and probabilistic sequence profiles. Using simulated metagenomic data, we quantified the accuracy with which PhylOTU clusters reads into OTUs. Comparisons of PCR and shotgun sequenced SSU-rRNA markers derived from the global open ocean revealed that while PCR libraries identify more OTUs per sequenced residue, metagenomic libraries recover a greater taxonomic diversity of OTUs. In addition, we discover novel species, genera and families in the metagenomic libraries, including OTUs from phyla missed by analysis of PCR sequences. Taken together, these results suggest that PhylOTU enables characterization of part of the biosphere currently hidden from PCR-based surveys of diversity
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Backbones of evolutionary history test biodiversity theory for microbes
Identifying the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that determine biological diversity is a central question in ecology. In microbial ecology, phylogenetic diversity is an increasingly common and relevant means of quantifying community diversity, particularly given the challenges in defining unambiguous species units from environmental sequence data. We explore patterns of phylogenetic diversity across multiple bacterial communities drawn from different habitats and compare these data to evolutionary trees generated using theoretical models of biodiversity. We have two central findings. First, although on finer scales the empirical trees are highly idiosyncratic, on coarse scales the backbone of these trees is simple and robust, consistent across habitats, and displays bursts of diversification dotted throughout. Second, we find that these data demonstrate a clear departure from the predictions of standard neutral theories of biodiversity and that an alternative family of generalized models provides a qualitatively better description. Together, these results lay the groundwork for a theoretical framework to connect ecological mechanisms to observed phylogenetic patterns in microbial communities.Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the National Academy of Sciences. The published article can be found at: http://www.pnas.org/Keywords: coalescent theory, macroecology, phylogeny, microbial biodiversit
Portable single-beam cesium zero-field magnetometer for magnetocardiography
Optically pumped magnetometers (OPMs) are becoming common in the realm of biomagnetic measurements. We discuss the development of a prototype zero-field cesium portable OPM and its miniaturized components. Zero-field sensors operate in a very low static magnetic field environment and exploit physical effects in this regime. OPMs of this type are extremely sensitive to small magnetic fields, but they bring specific challenges to component design, material choice, and current routing. The miniaturized cesium atomic vapor cell within this sensor has been produced through integrated microfabrication techniques. The cell must be heated to 120°C for effective sensing, while the sensor external faces must be skin safe ≤40°C making it suitable for use in biomagnetic measurements. We demonstrate a heating system that results in a stable outer package temperature of 36°C after 1.5 h of 120°C cell heating. This relatively cool package temperature enables safe operation on human subjects which is particularly important in the use of multi-sensor arrays. Biplanar printed circuit board coils are presented that produce a reliable homogeneous field along three axes, compensating residual fields and occupying only a small volume within the sensor. The performance of the prototype portable sensor is characterized through a measured sensitivity of 90 fT / Hz in the 5 to 20 Hz frequency band and demonstrated through the measurement of a cardiac magnetic signal
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