Paper List
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Autonomous Agents Coordinating Distributed Discovery Through Emergent Artifact Exchange
This paper addresses the fundamental limitation of current AI-assisted scientific research by enabling truly autonomous, decentralized investigation w...
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D-MEM: Dopamine-Gated Agentic Memory via Reward Prediction Error Routing
This paper addresses the fundamental scalability bottleneck in LLM agentic memory systems: the O(N²) computational complexity and unbounded API token ...
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Countershading coloration in blue shark skin emerges from hierarchically organized and spatially tuned photonic architectures inside skin denticles
This paper solves the core problem of how blue sharks achieve their striking dorsoventral countershading camouflage, revealing that coloration origina...
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Human-like Object Grouping in Self-supervised Vision Transformers
This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how well self-supervised vision models capture human-like object grouping in natural scenes, br...
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Hierarchical pp-Adic Framework for Gene Regulatory Networks: Theory and Stability Analysis
This paper addresses the core challenge of mathematically capturing the inherent hierarchical organization and multi-scale stability of gene regulator...
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Towards unified brain-to-text decoding across speech production and perception
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a unified brain-to-text decoding framework that works across both speech production and percepti...
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Dual-Laws Model for a theory of artificial consciousness
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a comprehensive, testable theory of consciousness that bridges biological and artificial systems...
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Pulse desynchronization of neural populations by targeting the centroid of the limit cycle in phase space
This work addresses the core challenge of determining optimal pulse timing and intensity for desynchronizing pathological neural oscillations when the...
Single-cell directional sensing at ultra-low chemoattractant concentrations from extreme first-passage events
University of Notre Dame | University of Utah
30秒速读
IN SHORT: 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 extremely weak (femto- to attomolar), and receptor binding events are discrete and rare.
核心创新
- Methodology Derives the first analytic expressions for the joint asymptotic distribution of the earliest k hitting times and their angular locations on a 2D circular cell, revealing that θ_k,N ~ N(θ_0, σ²_k,N) where σ²_k,N ∝ ( (R-1)² / (R W) ) * (1 + (2 log k)/(1+W) ) and W ~ log N.
- Theory Quantitatively demonstrates that early binding events (e.g., the first few arrivals) carry disproportionately more directional information than later arrivals, providing a theoretical basis for rapid cellular decision-making before a steady-state gradient is established.
- Methodology Proposes and rigorously analyzes the performance of several source-direction estimators (from simple averaging of early impact locations to more complex MLEs), deriving explicit formulas for their expected error and variance (e.g., E[ρ_k^res] ≈ (D/R)(b_N + a_N(log k - 1))).
主要结论
- The angular location θ_k of the k-th arriving molecule follows a normal distribution centered on the true source direction θ_0, with a variance that increases logarithmically with k (σ²_k,N ∝ log k), formally proving that earlier arrivals provide more precise directional cues.
- A simple estimator averaging the first k impact locations (n_res) can achieve accurate directional sensing with small k; its error grows with k while its variance decreases (Var[ρ_k^res] ≈ 4D²/(R²k)*((a_N log k + b_N - a_N)² + a_N²)), highlighting a trade-off.
- The theoretical framework successfully links key physical parameters (source distance R, initial molecule number N ~ 10³-10⁶, number of observed events k) to sensing performance, showing that accurate directional inference is possible even for R > 1 (source placed multiple cell radii away).
摘要: We investigate single-cell directional sensing from diffusing chemoattractant signals released by a localized source. We focus on the low-concentration regime in which receptor activity is discrete and cellular decisions are made on timescales far shorter than those required for steady-state concentration profiles or receptor occupancy to emerge. We derive analytic expressions for the joint distribution of receptor binding times and binding locations, conditional on the position of the source. We show that early binding events carry disproportionately more information about source directionality than later arrivals. Motivated by this observation, we propose and analyze several source-localization estimates that exploit early receptor binding statistics. Our results demonstrate that, even with a small number of binding events, cells possess sufficient information to rapidly and accurately infer the directionality of a diffusing chemoattractant source.