English

Multiscale Structure in Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics

Populations and Evolution 2015-09-15 v1 Statistical Mechanics Cellular Automata and Lattice Gases Quantum Physics

Abstract

In a complex system, the individual components are neither so tightly coupled or correlated that they can all be treated as a single unit, nor so uncorrelated that they can be approximated as independent entities. Instead, patterns of interdependency lead to structure at multiple scales of organization. Evolution excels at producing such complex structures. In turn, the existence of these complex interrelationships within a biological system affects the evolutionary dynamics of that system. I present a mathematical formalism for multiscale structure, grounded in information theory, which makes these intuitions quantitative, and I show how dynamics defined in terms of population genetics or evolutionary game theory can lead to multiscale organization. For complex systems, "more is different," and I address this from several perspectives. Spatial host--consumer models demonstrate the importance of the structures which can arise due to dynamical pattern formation. Evolutionary game theory reveals the novel effects which can result from multiplayer games, nonlinear payoffs and ecological stochasticity. Replicator dynamics in an environment with mesoscale structure relates to generalized conditionalization rules in probability theory. The idea of natural selection "acting at multiple levels" has been mathematized in a variety of ways, not all of which are equivalent. We will face down the confusion, using the experience developed over the course of this thesis to clarify the situation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1509.02958,
  title  = {Multiscale Structure in Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics},
  author = {Blake C. Stacey},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.02958},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

PhD thesis, 274 pages. Includes and updates material from arXiv:1110.3845

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:53:16.308Z