Complexity of Maximum Fixed Point Problem in Boolean Networks

Bridoux F.; Durbec N.

Abstract

© 2019, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.A Boolean network (BN) with n components is a discrete dynamical system described by the successive iterations of a function f: { 0, 1} n→ { 0, 1} n. This model finds applications in biology, where fixed points play a central role. For example in genetic regulation they correspond to cell phenotypes. In this context, experiments reveal the existence of positive or negative influences among components: component i has a positive (resp. negative) influence on component j, meaning that j tends to mimic (resp. negate) i. The digraph of influences is called signed interaction digraph (SID), and one SID may correspond to multiple BNs. The present work opens a new perspective on the well-established study of fixed points in BNs. Biologists discover the SID of a BN they do not know, and may ask: given that SID, can it correspond to a BN having at least k fixed points? Depending on the input, this problem is in P or complete for NP, NP#P or NEXPTIME.

Más información

Título según WOS: Complexity of Maximum Fixed Point Problem in Boolean Networks
Título según SCOPUS: Complexity of Maximum Fixed Point Problem in Boolean Networks
Título de la Revista: PROGRESS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND PATTERN RECOGNITION, IWAIPR 2018
Volumen: 11558 LNCS
Editorial: SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 132
Página final: 143
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1007/978-3-030-22996-2_12

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS