The same event may not necessarily occur against a given cognition (action) upon repetition. The degree of certainty in which a particular event actually occurs following a current cognition is the probability of the event viewed (experienced) by the focal cognizer. This is the internal concept of p
Probabilities of Encounters between Objects in Biological Systems: Meta-observer View
โ Scribed by TOSHIYUKI NAKAJIMA
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 508 KB
- Volume
- 211
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
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โฆ Synopsis
Encounters between objects play a crucial role in creating specific patterns of organization in many biological systems. This paper explores a general, quantitative principle of encounter probabilities, applicable over various levels of organization, as a fundamental step toward a comprehensive theory of biological probability ranging from cells through organisms to ecological communities. Based on the cognizers-system model, a general description of encounter probabilities in a finite position space is derived as a function of the number, or density, of objects with cognitive, selectivity properties incorporated as parameters. There is a prevailing wisdom, as supposed in many scientific thoughts, that the per-unit-time number of encounters between focal and target objects is given as a linear function of the density of target objects. One result shows that this idea does not describe the real nature of encounter probabilities or rates, but only a special case or approximation of a fundamental description. The analysis also explicates conditions for ignoring the presence of non-target objects, and those for the aggregation of two or more different objects into the same type sharing the same cognitive properties in the description of the probabilities.
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