Resets allow for canalization in high-dimensional state spaces
ORAL
Abstract
Resets have been shown to be a broadly relevant strategy for speeding up search in a broad range of contexts. Our work points out that in addition to saving time, reset mechanisms effectively reduce the entropy of paths used to reach a destination state. Such canalization into a few paths can be seen as a non-equilibrium version of Waddington's homeorhesis. The reduction in trajectory entropy can show up as higher order that can be observed in e.g. assembled structures or copied polymers. As a consequence, complex systems can achieve stereotyped reproducible behaviors, despite living in high-dimensional disordered state spaces, through simple non-equilibrium mechanisms that also provide speed benefits. We set out the minimal conditions needed for the evolution of such mechanism in an abstract model of cell division with a high-dimensional space of possible paths.
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Publication: R. Ravasio*, K. Husain*, C. G. Evans, R. Phillips, M. Ribezzi, J. W. Szostak, and A. Murugan. A minimal scenario for the origin of non-equilibrium order, 2024. URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2405.10911
Presenters
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Riccardo Ravasio
University of Chicago
Authors
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Riccardo Ravasio
University of Chicago
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Kabir B Husain
University of Chicago, University College London
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Constantine G Evans
Maynooth University
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Rob Phillips
Caltech
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Marco Ribezzi-Crivellari
ESPCI Paris
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Jack W Szostak
University of Chicago
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Arvind Murugan
University of Chicago