Paper List
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Ill-Conditioning in Dictionary-Based Dynamic-Equation Learning: A Systems Biology Case Study
This paper addresses the critical challenge of numerical ill-conditioning and multicollinearity in library-based sparse regression methods (e.g., SIND...
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Hybrid eTFCE–GRF: Exact Cluster-Size Retrieval with Analytical pp-Values for Voxel-Based Morphometry
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck in voxel-based neuroimaging analysis by providing a method that delivers exact cluster-size retrieva...
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abx_amr_simulator: A simulation environment for antibiotic prescribing policy optimization under antimicrobial resistance
This paper addresses the critical challenge of quantitatively evaluating antibiotic prescribing policies under realistic uncertainty and partial obser...
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PesTwin: a biology-informed Digital Twin for enabling precision farming
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in precision agriculture: the inability to accurately forecast pest outbreaks in real-time, leading to su...
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Equivariant Asynchronous Diffusion: An Adaptive Denoising Schedule for Accelerated Molecular Conformation Generation
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating physically plausible 3D molecular structures by bridging the gap between autoregressive methods ...
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Omics Data Discovery Agents
This paper addresses the core challenge of making published omics data computationally reusable by automating the extraction, quantification, and inte...
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Single-cell directional sensing at ultra-low chemoattractant concentrations from extreme first-passage events
This work addresses the core challenge of how a cell can rapidly and accurately determine the direction of a chemoattractant source when the signal is...
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SDSR: A Spectral Divide-and-Conquer Approach for Species Tree Reconstruction
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck in reconstructing species trees from thousands of species and multiple genes by introducing a scalab...
Hierarchical pp-Adic Framework for Gene Regulatory Networks: Theory and Stability Analysis
SECIHTI-CIMAT, Unidad Mérida, Mérida, Yucatán, México | Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, Pachuca, Hidalgo, México
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of mathematically capturing the inherent hierarchical organization and multi-scale stability of gene regulatory networks (GRNs) using a novel p-adic ultrametric framework.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a stability measure μ that quantifies how dynamics contract or expand across hierarchical resolution levels, computed solely from discrete network data (transition map and gene ordering).
- Methodology Proposes a ball-level classification of fixed points (contracting, expanding, isometric) within the p-adic framework, extending the classical point-wise attracting/repelling/indifferent trichotomy to hierarchical sets.
- Biology Defines an optimal regulatory hierarchy by minimizing μ over all N! gene orderings, which, in the A. thaliana floral network (N=13), successfully places known master regulators (UFO, EMF1, LFY, TFL1) in leading positions without prior biological knowledge.
主要结论
- The p-adic ultrametric provides a natural fractal framework (self-similar nested-ball structure) for embedding discrete GRN dynamics and modeling hierarchical organization across scales.
- The stability measure μ and ball-level fixed-point classification are fully determined by the discrete network data (f, ι), making them computationally accessible despite their foundation in the analytical field ℂp.
- Application to the A. thaliana floral development network (N=13, p=2) demonstrates that minimizing μ recovers a biologically meaningful hierarchy, placing master regulators (UFO, EMF1, LFY, TFL1) in leading positions and distinguishing floral organ attractors (e.g., IEAA vs. IEEE patterns).
摘要: Gene regulatory networks exhibit hierarchical organization across scales; capturing this structure mathematically requires a metric that distinguishes regulatory influence at each level. We show that the ultrametric of the p-adic integers ℤp—whose self-similar nested-ball structure is a natural fractal encoding of multi-scale organization—provides such a framework. Embedding the N-gene state space into ℤp and working over the complete, algebraically closed field ℂp, we prove the existence of rational functions that interpret the discrete dynamics and construct hierarchical approximations at each resolution level. These constructions yield a stability measure μ—aggregating how the dynamics contracts or expands across resolution levels—and a ball-level classification of fixed points—contracting, expanding, or isometric—extending the attracting/repelling/indifferent trichotomy of non-Archimedean dynamics from points to balls. A key result is that μ and the classification, although their definition and dynamical meaning require the analytical tools of ℂp, are fully determined by the discrete data. Minimizing μ over all N! gene orderings defines an optimal regulatory hierarchy; for the Arabidopsis thaliana floral development network (N=13, p=2), a μ-minimizing ordering places known master regulators—UFO, EMF1, LFY, TFL1—in the leading positions and recovers the accepted developmental hierarchy without biological input beyond the transition map.