Incorporating spatial correlations into multispecies mean-field models


Autoria(s): Markham, Deborah C.; Simpson, Matthew; Maini, Philip K.; Gaffney, Eamonn; Baker, Ruth
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

In biology, we frequently observe different species existing within the same environment. For example, there are many cell types in a tumour, or different animal species may occupy a given habitat. In modelling interactions between such species, we often make use of the mean field approximation, whereby spatial correlations between the locations of individuals are neglected. Whilst this approximation holds in certain situations, this is not always the case, and care must be taken to ensure the mean field approximation is only used in appropriate settings. In circumstances where the mean field approximation is unsuitable we need to include information on the spatial distributions of individuals, which is not a simple task. In this paper we provide a method that overcomes many of the failures of the mean field approximation for an on-lattice volume-excluding birth-death-movement process with multiple species. We explicitly take into account spatial information on the distribution of individuals by including partial differential equation descriptions of lattice site occupancy correlations. We demonstrate how to derive these equations for the multi-species case, and show results specific to a two-species problem. We compare averaged discrete results to both the mean field approximation and our improved method which incorporates spatial correlations. We note that the mean field approximation fails dramatically in some cases, predicting very different behaviour from that seen upon averaging multiple realisations of the discrete system. In contrast, our improved method provides excellent agreement with the averaged discrete behaviour in all cases, thus providing a more reliable modelling framework. Furthermore, our method is tractable as the resulting partial differential equations can be solved efficiently using standard numerical techniques.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63763/

Publicador

American Physical Society

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63763/1/PRE_2013d.pdf

DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.88.052713

Markham, Deborah C., Simpson, Matthew, Maini, Philip K., Gaffney, Eamonn, & Baker, Ruth (2013) Incorporating spatial correlations into multispecies mean-field models. Physical Review E, 88(5), 052713-1-052713-9.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 American Physical Society

Fonte

Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Mathematical Sciences; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #010202 Biological Mathematics #cell migration #cell proliferation #mathematical model #mean field #moment dynamics
Tipo

Journal Article