Scaling limits of a model for selection at two scales


Autoria(s): Luo, S; Mattingly, JC
Resumo

The dynamics of a population undergoing selection is a central topic in evolutionary biology. This question is particularly intriguing in the case where selective forces act in opposing directions at two population scales. For example, a fast-replicating virus strain outcompetes slower-replicating strains at the within-host scale. However, if the fast-replicating strain causes host morbidity and is less frequently transmitted, it can be outcompeted by slower-replicating strains at the between-host scale. Here we consider a stochastic ball-and-urn process which models this type of phenomenon. We prove the weak convergence of this process under two natural scalings. The first scaling leads to a deterministic nonlinear integro-partial differential equation on the interval $[0,1]$ with dependence on a single parameter, $\lambda$. We show that the fixed points of this differential equation are Beta distributions and that their stability depends on $\lambda$ and the behavior of the initial data around $1$. The second scaling leads to a measure-valued Fleming-Viot process, an infinite dimensional stochastic process that is frequently associated with a population genetics.

Identificador

http://arxiv.org/abs/1507.00397v1

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10332

Relação

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10331

10161/10331

10161/12939

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/12939

Palavras-Chave #math.PR #math.PR #math.DS #q-bio.PE #37, 60
Tipo

Journal Article