Login
Forgot Password?

OR

Login with Google Login with Twitter Login with Facebook
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • SuicideGirls
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
Vital Stats

crazyben

Salt Lake City, UT

Member Since 2007

Followers 629 Following 883

  • Everything
  • Photos
  • Video
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • From Others

Work. Work. Work. Gotta make make make dat math ;)

Oct 28, 2014
1
  • Facebook
  • Tweet
  • Email

So I've been studying aging via Markov Chain models that simulate various mutation regimes, trying to get a sense of why our different organ and tissue systems each seem to age at different rates. We know from the pathologists and cancer experts and doctors that, on average, our livers, kidneys and colons begin to accumulate misfolded and unused proteins when we're 20-30 and the accumulation speeds up exponentially when we hit 40. Our brains and hearts, on the other hand, seem to take till about 65 before they really begin showing signs of accumulated damage. They too appear to suffer an exponentially increasing accumulation of damage as well, and this is misfolded proteins, unused proteins, and oxidized mitochondrial free radicals. There is a "mitochondrial free radical" theory of aging which postulates that this IS the major cause of aging, but the models those people have contrived don't accomplish much, which is where my PhD thesis comes in :)

Anyhow, my 2 models finally run in R. The simpler model, a matrix model where the "organism" only has one mutation but must accumulate mutations in order to grow large enough to reproduce, shows a clear trade-off between fitness and mutation accumulation. It seems that if having lots of mutations means you can reproduce a lot, then cancer be damned. In particular if an organism has more kids after it reaches some period of maturity, then the tolerated mutation accumulation rate is much, much higher than an organism that can have an equal number of kids every breeding season.

The second model has 2 organs that can each mutate on their own, or both can in a series basically. So far with that model I don't see the clear tradeoff but I've only just got this massive Markov Chain simulation to run. I'm also doing a thought experiment: I'm asking, "If I observe a given amount of mutations that have accumulated over some period of time, say t, then can I hypothesize about the mutation accumulation rate that that tissue or organ must have experienced over time?" It's an interesting idea because it might allow us to see which organs truly are dissimilar in this sense, and which are not. I'm using some Metropolis-Hastings sims over the next week or two to see how that idea pans out.

Well, my eyes hurt from grading a bunch of freshmen biology quizzes! Night y'all!

More Blogs

  • 08.11.09
    2

    Tuesday Aug 11, 2009

    I had the most absurd recollection recently: not merely that a buff, …
  • 08.08.09
    1

    Saturday Aug 08, 2009

    Everybody my first article just appeared online! This is so friggin'…
  • 07.17.09
    0

    Saturday Jul 18, 2009

    I have been working away, once again, on a new idea for a paper: anim…
  • 07.09.09
    0

    Thursday Jul 09, 2009

    Everyone, my oldest brother, Namdev, is awesome. Please check out his…
  • 06.29.09
    6

    Monday Jun 29, 2009

    Hello All, I recently got the most amazing news, and totally unexpect…
  • 12.29.08
    9

    Monday Dec 29, 2008

    Well I can't post the whole paper on eusocial humans and other verteb…
  • 12.17.08
    3

    Wednesday Dec 17, 2008

    Alright: nother phat idea. I just wrote a brief article, building on…
  • 11.24.08
    1

    Tuesday Nov 25, 2008

    Paper #2i: This one is about the evolution of mutualism in snakes (s…
  • 11.24.08
    1

    Monday Nov 24, 2008

    What a fucking ridiculous year it turned out to be... Over the s…
  • 07.29.08
    2

    Wednesday Jul 30, 2008

    "It is said that the young Alcibiades, visiting a grammar school arou…

We at SuicideGirls have been celebrating alternative pin-up girls for:

23
years
9
months
1
day
  • 5,509,826 fans
  • 41,393 fans
  • 10,327,617 followers
  • 4,593 SuicideGirls
  • 1,121,309 followers
  • 14,917,115 photos
  • 321,315 followers
  • 61,383,665 comments
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
  • Help
  • About
  • Press
  • LIVE

Legal/Tos | DMCA | Privacy Policy | 18 U.S.C. 2257 Record-Keeping Requirements Compliance Statement | Contact Us | Vendo Payment Support
©SuicideGirls 2001-2025

Press enter to search
Fast Hi-res

Click here to join & see it all...

Crop your photo