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Alfonso Rodríguez-Patón
Researcher at Technical University of Madrid
Publications - 108
Citations - 2483
Alfonso Rodríguez-Patón is an academic researcher from Technical University of Madrid. The author has contributed to research in topics: Membrane computing & P system. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 108 publications receiving 2022 citations. Previous affiliations of Alfonso Rodríguez-Patón include Complutense University of Madrid.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tissue P systems
TL;DR: A computing model called a tissue P system is proposed, which processes symbols in a multiset rewriting sense, in a net of cells, which can simulate a Turing machine even when using a small number of cells.
Book ChapterDOI
A New Class of Symbolic Abstract Neural Nets: Tissue P Systems
TL;DR: In this article, a tissue P system is proposed, which processes symbols in a multiset rewriting sense, in a net of cells similar to a neural net, each cell has a finite state memory, processes multisets of symbol-impulses, and can send impulses ("excitations") to the neighboring cells.
Journal ArticleDOI
Meta-Path Methods for Prioritizing Candidate Disease miRNAs
TL;DR: This work reconstructs a miRNA functional similarity network using the following biological information: the miRNA family information, miRNA cluster information, experimentally valid miRNA—target association and disease—miRNA information, and reconstructing a disease similarity networks using disease functional information and disease semantic information.
Journal ArticleDOI
Spiking Neural P Systems With Colored Spikes
TL;DR: It is shown that SN P systems with colored spikes having three neurons are sufficient to compute Turing computable sets of numbers, and such system having two neurons is able to compute the family of recursive functions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Engineered toxin-intein antimicrobials can selectively target and kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria in mixed populations.
Rocío López-Igual,Rocío López-Igual,Rocío López-Igual,Joaquín Bernal-Bayard,Alfonso Rodríguez-Patón,Jean-Marc Ghigo,Didier Mazel,Didier Mazel +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that conjugation and specific killing of targeted bacteria occurs in the microbiota of zebrafish and crustacean larvae, which are natural hosts for Vibrio spp.