Posts Tagged ‘scipod15’

Systematic humanization of yeast genes reveals conserved functions and genetic modularity

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2015

Systematic humanization of yeast genes reveals conserved functions &…modularity http://www.sciencemag.org/content/348/6237/921.abstract #yeast survive in half of 400 swaps

New life for old bones

Monday, September 14th, 2015

New life for old bones https://www.sciencemag.org/content/349/6246/358.summary An explosion in ancient DNA research. Water & heat hard on DNA, creating a northern bias

Rock-paper-scissors may explain evolutionary ‘games’ in nature

Tuesday, September 8th, 2015

Rock-paper-scissors may explain evolutionary ‘games’
http://news.sciencemag.org/biology/2015/05/rock-paper-scissors-may-explain-evolutionary-games-nature How aggressive, cooperative & deceptive behaviors can coexist

QT:{{”
“The hand game “rock-paper-scissors” is a classic way to settle playground disputes, with rock smashing scissors, scissors cutting paper, and paper covering rock. But it turns out that nature plays its own versions of the game, and mathematicians and biologists have used it to study everything from human societies to bacteria in a petri dish. Now, researchers have found that when players change their strategies on the fly, a stable pattern arises in which each of the three weapons gains and loses popularity in turn. The discovery could shed light on how living creatures maintain competing strategies in the struggle for existence.

When applied to biology, rock-paper-scissors blossoms from a two-person children’s game into a complex dance among multiple players. Certain lizards, for example, use three competing
strategies—aggression, cooperation, and deception—to win mates, with each tactic beating one and losing to another—just like rock, paper, and scissors. For the lizards, winning the game equates to making babies.

Inspired by computer simulations of a related game, two
mathematicians—Steven Strogatz and Danielle Toupo of Cornell University—decided to get to the root of what happens when players switch strategies midgame. “I thought it was fascinating, and I wanted to find a mathematical model that would describe this in its simplest form,” Strogatz says. They went back to basics, studying the pure equations instead of complicated computer simulations.”
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