Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements

Abstract Living organisms, ecosystems, and social systems are examples of complex systems in which robustness against inclusion of new elements is an essential feature. A recently proposed simple model has revealed a general mechanism by which such systems can become robust against inclusion of elem...

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Main Authors: Fumiko Ogushi, János Kertész, Kimmo Kaski, Takashi Shimada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-08-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07283-9
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spelling doaj-67ec80c72a604dfbb7bbec473ff7dc4f2020-12-08T01:06:57ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-08-017111310.1038/s41598-017-07283-9Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elementsFumiko Ogushi0János Kertész1Kimmo Kaski2Takashi Shimada3Advanced Institute for Material Research, Tohoku UniversityCenter for Network Science, Central European UniversityDepartment of Computer Science, Aalto University School of ScienceDepartment of Computer Science, Aalto University School of ScienceAbstract Living organisms, ecosystems, and social systems are examples of complex systems in which robustness against inclusion of new elements is an essential feature. A recently proposed simple model has revealed a general mechanism by which such systems can become robust against inclusion of elements with totally random interactions when the elements have a moderate number of links. The interaction is, however, in many systems often intrinsically bidirectional like for mutual symbiosis and competition in ecology. This study reports the strong reinforcement effect of the bidirectionality of the interactions on the robustness of evolving systems. We show that the system with purely bidirectional interactions can grow with twofold average degree, in comparison with the purely unidirectional system. This drastic shift of the transition point comes from the reinforcement of each node, not from a change in structure of the emergent system. For systems with partially bidirectional interactions we find that the regime of the growing phase gets expanded. In the dense interaction regime, there exists an optimum proportion of bidirectional interactions for the growth rate at around 1/3. In the sparsely connected systems, small but finite fraction of bidirectional links can change the system’s behaviour from non-growing to growing.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07283-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fumiko Ogushi
János Kertész
Kimmo Kaski
Takashi Shimada
spellingShingle Fumiko Ogushi
János Kertész
Kimmo Kaski
Takashi Shimada
Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
Scientific Reports
author_facet Fumiko Ogushi
János Kertész
Kimmo Kaski
Takashi Shimada
author_sort Fumiko Ogushi
title Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
title_short Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
title_full Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
title_fullStr Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
title_full_unstemmed Enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
title_sort enhanced robustness of evolving open systems by the bidirectionality of interactions between elements
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Living organisms, ecosystems, and social systems are examples of complex systems in which robustness against inclusion of new elements is an essential feature. A recently proposed simple model has revealed a general mechanism by which such systems can become robust against inclusion of elements with totally random interactions when the elements have a moderate number of links. The interaction is, however, in many systems often intrinsically bidirectional like for mutual symbiosis and competition in ecology. This study reports the strong reinforcement effect of the bidirectionality of the interactions on the robustness of evolving systems. We show that the system with purely bidirectional interactions can grow with twofold average degree, in comparison with the purely unidirectional system. This drastic shift of the transition point comes from the reinforcement of each node, not from a change in structure of the emergent system. For systems with partially bidirectional interactions we find that the regime of the growing phase gets expanded. In the dense interaction regime, there exists an optimum proportion of bidirectional interactions for the growth rate at around 1/3. In the sparsely connected systems, small but finite fraction of bidirectional links can change the system’s behaviour from non-growing to growing.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07283-9
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