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A Physicist's Search for Simplicity and Unity in Living Systems from Cells and Ecosystems to Cities and Companies

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School of Physics Colloquium: Dr. Geoffrey West, Santa Fe Institute

Many of the most challenging, exciting and profound questions facing science and society, from the origins of life to global sustainability, fall under the banner of "complex adaptive systems’'. This talk explores how scaling can be used to begin to develop physics-inspired quantitative, predictive, coarse-grained theories for understanding their structure, dynamics and organization based on underlying mathematisable principles. Remarkably, most physiological, organisational and life history phenomena in biological and socio-economic systems scale in a simple and "universal'' fashion: metabolic rate scales approximately as the 3/4-power of mass over 27 orders of magnitude from complex molecules to the largest organisms. Time-scales (such as lifespans and growth-rates) and sizes (such as genome lengths and RNA densities) scale with exponents which are typically simple multiples of 1/4, suggesting that fundamental constraints underlie much of the generic structure and dynamics of living systems. These scaling laws follow from dynamical and geometrical properties of space-filling, fractal-like, hierarchical branching networks, presumed optimised by natural selection. This leads to a general framework for understanding essential features of diverse systems including vasculature, ontogenetic growth, tumors, aging and mortality, sleep, cell size, and DNA nucleotide substitution rates. Cities and companies also scale: wages, profits, patents, crime, disease, pollution, road lengths scale similarly across the globe, reflecting underlying universal social network dynamics which point to general principles of organization transcending their individuality. These have dramatic implications for global sustainability: innovation and wealth creation that fuel social systems, left unchecked, potentially sow the seeds for their inevitable collapse.

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  • Workflow Status:Published
  • Created By:Alison Morain
  • Created:02/27/2015
  • Modified By:Fletcher Moore
  • Modified:10/07/2016

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