PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Complex activity patterns emerge from simple underlying laws

2013-06-28
(Press-News.org) A new study from researchers at Uppsala University and University of Havana uses mathematic modeling and experiments on ants to show that a group is capable of developing flexible resource management strategies and characteristic responses of its own. The results are now published in Physical Review Letters.

Group-living animals are led to regulate their activity and to make decisions on how to manage resources, under the action of a variety of environmental stimuli and of their intrinsic interactions. The latter are typically cooperative, in the sense that the activity of a single animal increases nonlinearly with the number of already active ones.

The researchers monitored experimentally and using mathematical modeling the activity profile of food-searching ants in a natural environment. The number of ants entering in or exiting the nest was recorded as well as the local temperature over several days.

The study shows that the group is capable of developing flexible resource management strategies and characteristic responses of its own. This is achieved by operating in an aperiodic fashion close to a regime of chaos, where nonlinearity is especially pronounced and offers the group more options than just following passively the day/night temperature cycle.

Furthermore, the group bursts into its foraging activity rapidly and subsequently relaxes to the inactive mode more slowly. This flexible behavior is reminiscent of "free will" in the sense that groups' activities are not totally constrained by the environment but on the contrary constitute new, emerging modes of behavior not encoded in the external stimuli or in the activity rhythms of the individuals within the group.

"Our results are likely to account for a wide range of temporal rhythms observed across the animal kingdom as well as in human societies", says Stamatios Nicolis, researcher at the Department of Mathematics, who lead the study.

"For instance, signal processing in the brain typically leads to complex patterns of electrical activity as witnessed by the electroencephalogram whose aperiodic, chaotic-looking structure is not a simple replica of the signal but reflects instead the ability of the brain to store vast amounts information and to process them selectively depending on the circumstances", says Stamatios Nicolis.

###

"Foraging at the edge of chaos: Internal clock versus external forcing" by "S. C. Nicolis, J. Fernández, C. Pérez-Penichet, C. Noda, F. Tejera, O. Ramos, D. J. T. Sumpter, and E. Altshuler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 268104 (2013), DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.268104

For more information, please contact Stamatios Nicolis
tel: + 46 18-471 3236
e-mail: snicolis@math.uu.se


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Boat noise stops fish finding home

2013-06-28
Sophie Holles, a PhD researcher at the University of Bristol and one of the study's authors, said: "Natural underwater sound is used by many animals to find suitable habitat, and traffic noise is one of the most widespread pollutants. If settlement is disrupted by boat traffic, the resilience of habitats like reefs could be affected." Sound travels better underwater than in air and reefs are naturally noisy places: fish and invertebrates produce feeding and territorial sounds while wind, waves and currents create other background noise. Boats can be found around all ...

Detached-eddy simulations and analyses on new vortical flows over a 76/40 double delta wing

2013-06-28
The double delta wing is a simplified configuration used for studying aircraft aerodynamics. It is composed of a highly-swept delta wing connected in front of the main delta wing with a smaller sweep, reflecting the combination of a leading edge extension and the swept main wing. The aerodynamic performance of such wings, which includes the behavior of the leeside vortical flows at moderate and high angles of attack (AoA) at low speed, is of research interest. The prominent aerodynamic feature of the delta wing is the dominant leading edge vortex pair on the lee side, ...

Scientists discover new mechanism regulating the immune response

2013-06-28
Scientists at an Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence have discovered a new mechanism regulating the immune response that can leave a person susceptible to autoimmune diseases. A fresh study by Turku Centre for Biotechnology and Aalto University in Finland is the first to report a new mechanism that regulates specification of lymphocytes, the white blood cells pivotal to immune response. By combining state-of-the art techniques, next-generation deep sequencing and computational data mining, the researchers discovered new epigenetic factors regulating lymphocyte function. ...

Dendritic cell therapy improves kidney transplant survival, Pitt team says

2013-06-28
PITTSBURGH, June 28, 2013 -- A single systemic dose of special immune cells prevented rejection for almost four months in a preclinical animal model of kidney transplantation, according to experts at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Their findings, now available in the online version of the American Journal of Transplantation, could lay the foundation for eventual human trials of the technique. Organ transplantation has saved many lives, but at the cost of sometimes lifelong requirements for powerful immunosuppressive medication that can have serious side ...

Pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons may be a viable Parkinson's disease treatment

2013-06-28
Putnam Valley, NY. (Jun. 28 2013) – A team of researchers from Rush University, Yale University, the University of Colorado and the St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation transplanted human embryonic stem cells into primate laboratory animals modeled with Parkinson's disease and found "robust survival" of the cells after six weeks and indications that the cells were "well integrated" into the host animals. The study appears as an early e-publication for the journal Cell Transplantation, and is now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/pre-prints/ct1000wakeman. ...

SCI patients treated with own olfactory ensheathing cells realize neurologic improvement

2013-06-28
Putnam Valley, NY. (June 28 2013) – A team of researchers in Poland who treated three of six paraplegics with spinal cord injury using transplanted olfactory ensheathing cells found that the three treated patients showed neurological improvement and no adverse effects while the three control patients who did not receive transplants saw no improvement. The study appears as an early e-publication for the journal Cell Transplantation, and is now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/pre-prints/ct0799tabakow. "Most accepted treatments ...

Is it alive or dead?

2013-06-28
WASHINGTON D.C., June 27, 2013 -- To the ancients, probing the philosophical question of how to distinguish the living from the dead centered on the "mystery of the vital heat." To modern microbiology, this question was always less mysterious than it was annoying -- researchers have known that biological processes should produce thermal signatures, even within single cells, but nobody ever knew how to measure them. Now, a group of mechanical engineers from Pohang University of Science and Technology in Korea have discovered a way to measure the "thermal conductivity" ...

Type 2 diabetes patients transplanted with own bone marrow stem cells reduces insulin use

2013-06-28
Putnam Valley, NY. (June 28 2013) –A study carried out in India examining the safety and efficacy of self-donated (autologous), transplanted bone marrow stem cells in patients with type 2 diabetes (TD2M), has found that patients receiving the transplants, when compared to a control group of TD2M patients who did not receive transplantation, required less insulin post-transplantation. The study appears as an early e-publication for the journal Cell Transplantation, and is now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/pre-prints/ct0920bhansali. "There ...

Scientists view 'protein origami' to help understand, prevent certain diseases

2013-06-28
COLLEGE STATION -- Scientists using sophisticated imaging techniques have observed a molecular protein folding process that may help medical researchers understand and treat diseases such as Alzheimer's, Lou Gehrig's and cancer. The study, reported this month in the journal Cell, verifies a process that scientists knew existed but with a mechanism they had never been able to observe, according to Dr. Hays Rye, Texas A&M AgriLife Research biochemist. "This is a step in the direction of understanding how to modulate systems to prevent diseases ...

Rice U. releases findings from national Portraits of American Life Study

2013-06-28
Americans are more respectful now than ever before when it comes to the religious traditions of their peers, according to findings from the longitudinal Rice University Portraits of American Life Study (PALS). Other findings: Americans are more divided on the legal definition of marriage, favor restrictions on abortion, support pathways to citizenship for undocumented immigrants and are less politically engaged (with the exception of African-Americans). PALS is a six-year national study tracking religion, morality, politics and other social issues in the U.S. The study ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Smoking cannabis in the home increases odds of detectable levels in children

Ohio State astronomy professor awarded Henry Draper Medal

Communities of color face greater barriers in accessing opioid medications for pain management

Researchers track sharp increase in diagnoses for sedative, hypnotic and anxiety use disorder in young adults

Advancement in DNA quantum computing using electric field gradients and nuclear spins

How pomalidomide boosts the immune system to fight multiple myeloma

PREPSOIL webinar explores soil literacy among youth: Why it matters and how educators can foster it

Imagining the physics of George R.R. Martin’s fictional universe

New twist in mystery of dinosaurs' origin

Baseline fasting glucose level, age, sex, and BMI and the development of diabetes in US adults

Food insecurity in pregnancy, receipt of food assistance, and perinatal complications

Exposure to secondhand cannabis smoke among children

New study reveals how a ‘non-industrialized’ style diet can reduce risk of chronic disease

Plant’s name-giving feature found to be new offspring-ensuring method

Predicting how childhood kidney cancers develop

New optical memory unit poised to improve processing speed and efficiency

World Leprosy Day: Tailored guidelines and reduced stigma needed to tackle leprosy, Irish case study reveals

FAU secures $21M Promise Neighborhoods grant for Broward UP underserved communities

Korea-US leading research institutes accelerate collaboration for energy technology innovation

JAMA names ten academic physicians and nurses to 2025 Editorial Fellowship Program

New study highlights role of lean red meat in gut and heart health as part of a balanced healthy diet

Microporous crystals for greater food safety – ERC proof of concept grant for researcher at Graz University of Technology

Offline versus online promotional media: Which drives better consumer engagement and behavioral responses?

Seoultech researchers use machine learning to ensure safe structural design

Empowering numerical weather predictions with drones as meteorological tools

From root to shoot: How silicon powers plant resilience

Curiosity- driven experiment helps unravel antibiotic-resistance mystery

Designing proteins with their environment in mind

Hepatitis B is a problem for a growing number of patients on immunosuppressive medications

Adults diagnosed with ADHD may have reduced life expectancies

[Press-News.org] Complex activity patterns emerge from simple underlying laws