Authors
Ben Adlam, Krishnendu Chatterjee, Martin A Nowak
Publication date
2015/9/8
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
Volume
471
Issue
2181
Pages
20150114
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing
Description
When a new mutant arises in a population, there is a probability it outcompetes the residents and fixes. The structure of the population can affect this fixation probability. Suppressing population structures reduce the difference between two competing variants, while amplifying population structures enhance the difference. Suppressors are ubiquitous and easy to construct, but amplifiers for the large population limit are more elusive and only a few examples have been discovered. Whether or not a population structure is an amplifier of selection depends on the probability distribution for the placement of the invading mutant. First, we prove that there exist only bounded amplifiers for adversarial placement—that is, for arbitrary initial conditions. Next, we show that the Star population structure, which is known to amplify for mutants placed uniformly at random, does not amplify for mutants that arise through reproduction …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Adlam, K Chatterjee, MA Nowak - Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical …, 2015