677 research outputs found

    Probabilistic Clustering of Sequences: Inferring new bacterial regulons by comparative genomics

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    Genome wide comparisons between enteric bacteria yield large sets of conserved putative regulatory sites on a gene by gene basis that need to be clustered into regulons. Using the assumption that regulatory sites can be represented as samples from weight matrices we derive a unique probability distribution for assignments of sites into clusters. Our algorithm, 'PROCSE' (probabilistic clustering of sequences), uses Monte-Carlo sampling of this distribution to partition and align thousands of short DNA sequences into clusters. The algorithm internally determines the number of clusters from the data, and assigns significance to the resulting clusters. We place theoretical limits on the ability of any algorithm to correctly cluster sequences drawn from weight matrices (WMs) when these WMs are unknown. Our analysis suggests that the set of all putative sites for a single genome (e.g. E. coli) is largely inadequate for clustering. When sites from different genomes are combined and all the homologous sites from the various species are used as a block, clustering becomes feasible. We predict 50-100 new regulons as well as many new members of existing regulons, potentially doubling the number of known regulatory sites in E. coli.Comment: 27 pages including 9 figures and 3 table

    Evolutionary games and quasispecies

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    We discuss a population of sequences subject to mutations and frequency-dependent selection, where the fitness of a sequence depends on the composition of the entire population. This type of dynamics is crucial to understand the evolution of genomic regulation. Mathematically, it takes the form of a reaction-diffusion problem that is nonlinear in the population state. In our model system, the fitness is determined by a simple mathematical game, the hawk-dove game. The stationary population distribution is found to be a quasispecies with properties different from those which hold in fixed fitness landscapes.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Typos corrected, references updated. An exact solution for the hawks-dove game is provide

    Coupled Replicator Equations for the Dynamics of Learning in Multiagent Systems

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    Starting with a group of reinforcement-learning agents we derive coupled replicator equations that describe the dynamics of collective learning in multiagent systems. We show that, although agents model their environment in a self-interested way without sharing knowledge, a game dynamics emerges naturally through environment-mediated interactions. An application to rock-scissors-paper game interactions shows that the collective learning dynamics exhibits a diversity of competitive and cooperative behaviors. These include quasiperiodicity, stable limit cycles, intermittency, and deterministic chaos--behaviors that should be expected in heterogeneous multiagent systems described by the general replicator equations we derive.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, http://www.santafe.edu/projects/CompMech/papers/credlmas.html; updated references, corrected typos, changed conten

    On the Neutrality of Flowshop Scheduling Fitness Landscapes

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    Solving efficiently complex problems using metaheuristics, and in particular local searches, requires incorporating knowledge about the problem to solve. In this paper, the permutation flowshop problem is studied. It is well known that in such problems, several solutions may have the same fitness value. As this neutrality property is an important one, it should be taken into account during the design of optimization methods. Then in the context of the permutation flowshop, a deep landscape analysis focused on the neutrality property is driven and propositions on the way to use this neutrality to guide efficiently the search are given.Comment: Learning and Intelligent OptimizatioN Conference (LION 5), Rome : Italy (2011

    Clinical determinants of vaginal dryness in patients with primary Sjögren's syndrome

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    Objective. The majority of women with primary Sjogren's syndrome (pSS) suffer from vaginal dryness, which negatively impacts daily and sexual activities. As little is known about the aetiology and clinical context of this complaint, this study investigated the relationship between vaginal dryness and other clinical parameters associated with pSS. Methods. Female participants of the REgistry of Sjogren syndrome at UMCG - LongiTudinal (RESULT) cohort who fulfilled ACR-EULAR and/or AECG classification criteria for pSS were included, using baseline data for analyses. Patient-reported vaginal dryness (range 0-10) was correlated with demographic characteristics, systemic disease activity (i.e. ESSDAI), Sjogren's Syndrome Disease Damage Index, salivary and lacrimal gland function, patient-reported outcomes (ESSPRI, MFI), serology and quality of life (SF-36, EQ-5D). Significantly associated parameters (p Results. This cross-sectional study included 199 women with pSS; mean age was 52 +/- 14 years, 53% were postmenopausal, and median vaginal dryness score was 5 (IQR 2-7). Vaginal dryness was significantly associated with older age, postmenopausal status, peripheral neuropathy, oral and ocular dryness, ESSPRI and SF-36 mental and general health. After correction for age, menopausal status and medication use, peripheral neuropathy (B=1.632), oral dryness (B=0.302), and ocular dryness (B=0.230) were independently associated with vaginal dryness. Conclusion. The independent association of vaginal dryness with oral and ocular dryness might imply that the aetiology of these symptoms is partly shared. Of all extraglandular features, only peripheral neuropathy was independently associated with vaginal dryness, suggesting that peripheral neuropathy plays a significant role in the pathology of vaginal dryness in pSS
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