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David A. Kessler

Researcher at United States Naval Research Laboratory

Publications -  378
Citations -  10682

David A. Kessler is an academic researcher from United States Naval Research Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Instability. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 364 publications receiving 9669 citations. Previous affiliations of David A. Kessler include University of Michigan & Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

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Scaling Green-Kubo Relation and Application to Three Aging Systems

TL;DR: A generalization of the Green-Kubo formula for systems that never reach equilibrium has been proposed in this article, and a new fundamental piece of contemporary statistical physics is laid down.
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Biological Networks Regulating Cell Fate Choice Are Minimally Frustrated

TL;DR: It is shown that minimal frustration is a fundamental property that allows biological networks to robustly establish cell types and regulate cell fate choice, and this property can emerge in complex networks via Darwinian evolution.
Posted Content

Supplementary information for "The fixation probability of rare mutators in finite asexual populations"

TL;DR: A diffusion-based approximation for Pfix successfully captures effects ii and iii when selection is fast compared to mutation, and enables us to predict the conditions under which mutators will be evolutionarily favored.
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Generation and prediction of time series by a neural network

TL;DR: Generation and prediction of time series are analyzed for the case of a bit generator where in each time step the input units are shifted one bit to the right with the state of the leftmost input unit set equal to the output unit in the previous time step.
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Optimal strategy for competence differentiation in bacteria.

TL;DR: Stochastic population genetic computer simulations find that transformation can increase both the rate of adaptive evolution and the equilibrium level of fitness, demonstrating that population genetic forces can give rise to phenotypic diversity even in an unchanging and homogeneous environment.