26 research outputs found

    A Cost / Speed / Reliability Trade-off to Erasing

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    We present a KL-control treatment of the fundamental problem of erasing a bit. We introduce notions of "reliability" of information storage via a reliability timescale τr\tau_r, and "speed" of erasing via an erasing timescale τe\tau_e. Our problem formulation captures the tradeoff between speed, reliability, and the Kullback-Leibler (KL) cost required to erase a bit. We show that rapid erasing of a reliable bit costs at least log2log(1eτeτr)>log2\log 2 - \log\left(1 - \operatorname{e}^{-\frac{\tau_e}{\tau_r}}\right) > \log 2, which goes to 12log2τrτe\frac{1}{2} \log\frac{2\tau_r}{\tau_e} when τr>>τe\tau_r>>\tau_e.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures. Conference version: Unconventional Computation and Natural Computation (2015), pp. 192--201, Springer International Publishing. Changes: Section 4 is substantially expanded with a discussion of possible physical meanings for the KL-cost functio

    A Projection Argument for Differential Inclusions, with Applications to Persistence of Mass-Action Kinetics

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    Motivated by questions in mass-action kinetics, we introduce the notion of vertexical family of differential inclusions. Defined on open hypercubes, these families are characterized by particular good behavior under projection maps. The motivating examples are certain families of reaction networks -- including reversible, weakly reversible, endotactic, and strongly endotactic reaction networks -- that give rise to vertexical families of mass-action differential inclusions. We prove that vertexical families are amenable to structural induction. Consequently, a trajectory of a vertexical family approaches the boundary if and only if either the trajectory approaches a vertex of the hypercube, or a trajectory in a lower-dimensional member of the family approaches the boundary. With this technology, we make progress on the global attractor conjecture, a central open problem concerning mass-action kinetics systems. Additionally, we phrase mass-action kinetics as a functor on reaction networks with variable rates.Comment: v5: published version; v3 and v4: minor additional edits; v2: contains more general version of main theorem on vertexical families, including its accompanying corollaries -- some of them new; final section contains new results relating to prior and future research on persistence of mass-action systems; improved exposition throughou
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