Institution
University of Maribor
Education•Maribor, Slovenia•
About: University of Maribor is a education organization based out in Maribor, Slovenia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & KEKB. The organization has 3987 authors who have published 13077 publications receiving 258339 citations. The organization is also known as: Univerza v Mariboru.
Topics: Population, KEKB, Liquid crystal, European union, Branching fraction
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the impact of conformity on the evolution of cooperation in social dilemmas and show that an appropriate fraction of conformists within the population introduces an effective surface tension around cooperative clusters and ensures smooth interfaces between different strategy domains.
Abstract: The pursuit of highest payoffs in evolutionary social dilemmas is risky and sometimes inferior to conformity. Choosing the most common strategy within the interaction range is safer because it ensures that the payoff of an individual will not be much lower than average. Herding instincts and crowd behavior in humans and social animals also compel to conformity on their own right. Motivated by these facts, we here study the impact of conformity on the evolution of cooperation in social dilemmas. We show that an appropriate fraction of conformists within the population introduces an effective surface tension around cooperative clusters and ensures smooth interfaces between different strategy domains. Payoff-driven players brake the symmetry in favor of cooperation and enable an expansion of clusters past the boundaries imposed by traditional network reciprocity. This mechanism works even under the most testing conditions, and it is robust against variations of the interaction network as long as degree-normalized payoffs are applied. Conformity may thus be beneficial for the resolution of social dilemmas.
175 citations
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TL;DR: In the paper some types of equivalences over resemblance measures and some basic results about them are given, and standard association coefficients between binary vectors are compared both theoretically and computationally.
Abstract: In the paper some types of equivalences over resemblance measures and some basic results about them are given. Based on induced partial orderings on the set of unordered pairs of units a dissimilarity between two resemblance measures over finite sets of units can be defined. As an example, using this dissimilarity standard association coefficients between binary vectors are compared both theoretically and computationally.
174 citations
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TL;DR: It is observed that influential individuals must be few and sparsely connected in order for cooperation to thrive in a defection-prone environment and only minute values of p warrant the best promotion of cooperation.
Abstract: We study the evolution of cooperation within the spatial prisoner's dilemma game on a square lattice where a fraction of players mu can spread their strategy more easily than the rest due to a predetermined larger teaching capability. In addition, players characterized by the larger teaching capability are allowed to temporarily link with distant opponents of the same kind with probability p , thus introducing shortcut connections among the distinguished players. We show that these additional temporary connections are able to sustain cooperation throughout the whole range of the temptation to defect. Remarkably, we observe that, as the temptation to defect increases the optimal mu decreases, and moreover only minute values of p warrant the best promotion of cooperation. Our study thus indicates that influential individuals must be few and sparsely connected in order for cooperation to thrive in a defection-prone environment.
174 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the behavior of relatively large populations of motor neurons during rapid (explosive) contractions in humans, applying a new approach to accurately identify motor neuron activity simultaneous to measuring the rate of force development.
Abstract: KEY POINTS We propose and validate a method for accurately identifying the activity of populations of motor neurons during contractions at maximal rate of force development in humans. The behaviour of the motor neuron pool during rapid voluntary contractions in humans is presented. We show with this approach that the motor neuron recruitment speed and maximal motor unit discharge rate largely explains the individual ability in generating rapid force contractions. The results also indicate that the synaptic inputs received by the motor neurons before force is generated dictate human potential to generate force rapidly. This is the first characterization of the discharge behaviour of a representative sample of human motor neurons during rapid contractions. ABSTRACT During rapid contractions, motor neurons are recruited in a short burst and begin to discharge at high frequencies (up to >200 Hz). In the present study, we investigated the behaviour of relatively large populations of motor neurons during rapid (explosive) contractions in humans, applying a new approach to accurately identify motor neuron activity simultaneous to measuring the rate of force development. The activity of spinal motor neurons was assessed by high-density electromyographic decomposition from the tibialis anterior muscle of 20 men during isometric explosive contractions. The speed of motor neuron recruitment and the instantaneous motor unit discharge rate were analysed as a function of the impulse (the time-force integral) and the maximal rate of force development. The peak of motor unit discharge rate occurred before force generation and discharge rates decreased thereafter. The maximal motor unit discharge rate was associated with the explosive force variables, at the whole population level (r2 = 0.71 ± 0.12; P < 0.001). Moreover, the peak motor unit discharge and maximal rate of force variables were correlated with an estimate of the supraspinal drive, which was measured as the speed of motor unit recruitment before the generation of afferent feedback (P < 0.05). We show for the first time the full association between the effective neural drive to the muscle and human maximal rate of force development. The results obtained in the present study indicate that the variability in the maximal contractile explosive force of the human tibialis anterior muscle is determined by the neural activation preceding force generation.
174 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a method to solve the PDE problem using the Web of Science Record created on 2010-11-05, modified on 2017-12-10.
Abstract: Reference EPFL-ARTICLE-154420doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.78.072006View record in Web of Science Record created on 2010-11-05, modified on 2017-12-10
173 citations
Authors
Showing all 4077 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Ignacio E. Grossmann | 112 | 776 | 46185 |
Mirjam Cvetič | 89 | 456 | 27867 |
T. Sumiyoshi | 88 | 855 | 62277 |
M. Bračko | 87 | 738 | 30195 |
Xin-She Yang | 85 | 444 | 61136 |
Matjaž Perc | 84 | 400 | 22115 |
Baowen Li | 83 | 477 | 23080 |
S. Nishida | 82 | 678 | 27709 |
P. Križan | 78 | 749 | 26408 |
S. Korpar | 78 | 615 | 23802 |
Attila Szolnoki | 76 | 231 | 20423 |
H. Kawai | 76 | 477 | 22713 |
John Shawe-Taylor | 72 | 503 | 52369 |
Matjaz Perc | 57 | 148 | 12886 |
Mitja Lainscak | 55 | 287 | 22004 |