We consider an interacting particle system on a graph which, from a macroscopic point of view, looks like ℤd and, at a microscopic level, is a complete graph of degree N (called a patch). There are two birth rates: an inter-patch birth rate λ and an intra-patch birth rate φ. Once a site is occupied, there is no breeding from outside the patch and the probability c(i) of success of an intra-patch breeding decreases with the size i of the population in the site. We prove the existence of a critical value λc(φ, c,N) and a critical value φc(λ , c,N). We consider a sequence of processes generated by the families of control functions {cn}nεℕ and degrees {Nn}nεℕ we prove, under mild assumptions, the existence of a critical value n c(λ, φ, c). Roughly speaking, we show that, in the limit, these processes behave as the branching random walk on Zd with inter-neighbor birth rate λ and on-site birth rate φ.Some examples of models that can be seen as particular cases are given. © Applied Probability Trust 2010.

Belhadji, L., Bertacchi, D., Zucca, F. (2010). A self-regulating and patch subdivided population. ADVANCES IN APPLIED PROBABILITY, 42(3), 899-912 [10.1239/aap/1282924068].

A self-regulating and patch subdivided population

BERTACCHI, DANIELA;
2010

Abstract

We consider an interacting particle system on a graph which, from a macroscopic point of view, looks like ℤd and, at a microscopic level, is a complete graph of degree N (called a patch). There are two birth rates: an inter-patch birth rate λ and an intra-patch birth rate φ. Once a site is occupied, there is no breeding from outside the patch and the probability c(i) of success of an intra-patch breeding decreases with the size i of the population in the site. We prove the existence of a critical value λc(φ, c,N) and a critical value φc(λ , c,N). We consider a sequence of processes generated by the families of control functions {cn}nεℕ and degrees {Nn}nεℕ we prove, under mild assumptions, the existence of a critical value n c(λ, φ, c). Roughly speaking, we show that, in the limit, these processes behave as the branching random walk on Zd with inter-neighbor birth rate λ and on-site birth rate φ.Some examples of models that can be seen as particular cases are given. © Applied Probability Trust 2010.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
contact process; restrained branching random walk; epidemic model; phase transition; critical parameters
English
2010
42
3
899
912
open
Belhadji, L., Bertacchi, D., Zucca, F. (2010). A self-regulating and patch subdivided population. ADVANCES IN APPLIED PROBABILITY, 42(3), 899-912 [10.1239/aap/1282924068].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
A SELF-REGULATING AND PATCH SUBDIVIDED POPULATION.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia di allegato: Author’s Accepted Manuscript, AAM (Post-print)
Dimensione 208.03 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
208.03 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/18896
Citazioni
  • Scopus 6
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 5
Social impact