HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Evolutionary graph theory is an area of research lying at the intersection of graph theory, probability theory, and
mathematical biology Mathematical and theoretical biology, or biomathematics, is a branch of biology which employs theoretical analysis, mathematical models and abstractions of the living organisms to investigate the principles that govern the structure, development a ...
. Evolutionary graph theory is an approach to studying how topology affects evolution of a population. That the underlying topology can substantially affect the results of the evolutionary process is seen most clearly in a paper by Erez Lieberman, Christoph Hauert and Martin Nowak. In evolutionary graph theory, individuals occupy vertices of a weighted directed graph and the weight wi j of an edge from vertex ''i'' to vertex ''j'' denotes the probability of ''i'' replacing ''j''. The weight corresponds to the biological notion of fitness where fitter types propagate more readily. One property studied on graphs with two types of individuals is the ''fixation probability'', which is defined as the probability that a single, randomly placed mutant of type A will replace a population of type B. According to the ''isothermal theorem'', a graph has the same fixation probability as the corresponding
Moran process A Moran process or Moran model is a simple stochastic process used in biology to describe finite populations. The process is named after Patrick Moran, who first proposed the model in 1958. It can be used to model variety-increasing processes such ...
if and only if it is isothermal, thus the sum of all weights that lead into a vertex is the same for all vertices. Thus, for example, a complete graph with equal weights describes a Moran process. The fixation probability is : \begin \rho_M = \frac \end where ''r'' is the relative fitness of the invading type. Graphs can be classified into amplifiers of selection and suppressors of selection. If the fixation probability of a single advantageous mutation \rho_G is higher than the fixation probability of the corresponding
Moran process A Moran process or Moran model is a simple stochastic process used in biology to describe finite populations. The process is named after Patrick Moran, who first proposed the model in 1958. It can be used to model variety-increasing processes such ...
\rho_M then the graph is an amplifier, otherwise a suppressor of selection. One example of the suppressor of selection is a linear process where only vertex ''i-1'' can replace vertex ''i'' (but not the other way around). In this case the fixation probability is \rho_G = 1/N (where ''N'' is the number of vertices) since this is the probability that the mutation arises in the first vertex which will eventually replace all the other ones. Since \rho_G < \rho_M for all ''r'' greater than 1, this graph is by definition a suppressor of selection. Evolutionary graph theory may also be studied in a dual formulation, as a
coalescing random walk Coalescence may refer to: * Coalescence (chemistry), the process by which two or more separate masses of miscible substances seem to "pull" each other together should they make the slightest contact * Coalescence (computer science), the merging o ...
, or as a stochastic process. We may consider the mutant population on a graph as a random walk between absorbing barriers representing mutant extinction and mutant fixation. For highly symmetric graphs, we can then use martingales to find the ''fixation probability'' as illustrated by Monk (2018). Also
evolutionary games Evolution is change in the heritable characteristics of biological populations over successive generations. These characteristics are the expressions of genes, which are passed on from parent to offspring during reproduction. Variation t ...
can be studied on graphs where again an edge between ''i'' and ''j'' means that these two individuals will play a game against each other. Closely related stochastic processes include the
voter model In the mathematical theory of probability, the voter model is an interacting particle system introduced by Richard A. Holley and Thomas M. Liggett in 1975. One can imagine that there is a "voter" at each point on a connected graph, where the ...
, which was introduced by Clifford and Sudbury (1973) and independently by Holley and Liggett (1975), and which has been studied extensively.


Bibliography

* * * * *


References


External links

A virtual laboratory for studying evolution on graph


Further reading

* {{cite journal , last1=Allen , first1=Benjamin , last2=Nowak , first2=Martin A. , author2-link=Martin Nowak , title=Games on graphs , journal=EMS Surveys in Mathematical Sciences , volume=1 , number=1 , year=2014 , pages=113–151 , doi= 10.4171/emss/3, doi-access=free Evolution Application-specific graphs Evolutionary dynamics