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...
A multiscale discrete-to-continuum framework for structured population models
Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, OX2 6GG Oxford, UK | Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, University of Oxford, OX3 7DQ Oxford, UK
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of systematically deriving uniformly valid continuum approximations from discrete structured population models, overcoming ambiguities in truncation order and boundary conditions inherent in traditional Taylor expansion methods.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a discrete multiscale framework combining the method of multiple scales with matched asymptotic expansions to systematically derive continuum approximations, identifying regions where continuum representation is appropriate versus fundamentally discrete.
- Methodology Provides asymptotically consistent boundary conditions through discrete boundary layer analysis, resolving the ambiguity in boundary condition selection that plagues traditional Taylor expansion approaches.
- Methodology Demonstrates the framework on a lipid-structured model for early atherosclerosis, showing consistency between discrete and continuum descriptions and validating the method's practical applicability.
主要结论
- The method identifies distinct asymptotic regions: outer regions (e.g., O1-O4) describable by continuum PDEs (nonlinear advection equations) and inner boundary layers (e.g., IN1-IN5, B1-B4) that remain fundamentally discrete and require separate analysis.
- For the paradigm problem (Eq. 1), the framework yields a composite solution (Eq. 16) asymptotically consistent with the exact discrete steady state (Eq. 10), unlike the truncated PDE solution (Eq. 9) which predicts an incorrect decay rate (a/(εb) vs. log((2b+a)/(2b-a))/ε).
- The framework successfully derives a continuum approximation for a lipid-structured atherosclerosis model, verifying consistency and demonstrating transferability to biological systems with discrete internal states (e.g., lipid accumulation in macrophages).
摘要: Mathematical models of biological populations commonly use discrete structure classes to capture trait variation among individuals (e.g. age, size, phenotype, intracellular state). Upscaling these discrete models into continuum descriptions can improve analytical tractability and scalability of numerical solutions. Common upscaling approaches based solely on Taylor expansions may, however, introduce ambiguities in truncation order, uniform validity and boundary conditions. To address this, here we introduce a discrete multiscale framework to systematically derive continuum approximations of structured population models. Using the method of multiple scales and matched asymptotic expansions applied to discrete systems, we identify regions of structure space for which a continuum representation is appropriate and derive the corresponding partial differential equations. The leading-order dynamics are given by a nonlinear advection equation in the bulk domain and advection-diffusion processes in small inner layers about the leading wavefronts and stagnation point. We further derive discrete boundary layer descriptions for regions where a continuum representation is fundamentally inappropriate. Finally, we demonstrate the method on a simple lipid-structured model for early atherosclerosis and verify consistency between the discrete and continuum descriptions. The multiscale framework we present can be applied to other heterogeneous systems with discrete structure in order to obtain appropriate upscaled dynamics with asymptotically consistent boundary conditions.