Turing instabilities are not enough to ensure pattern formation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6153648
DOI10.1007/s11538-023-01250-4arXiv2308.15311OpenAlexW4391091601MaRDI QIDQ6153648
Eamonn A. Gaffney, Thomas Jun Jewell, Benjamin J. Walker, Andrew L. Krause, Václav Klika
Publication date: 14 February 2024
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.15311
Reaction-diffusion equations (35K57) Developmental biology, pattern formation (92C15) Pattern formations in context of PDEs (35B36)
Cites Work
- An explicit theory for pulses in two component, singularly perturbed, reaction-diffusion equations
- Spatio-temporal chaos in a chemotaxis model
- Initiation of slime mold aggregation viewed as an instability
- A nonlocal model for contact attraction and repulsion in heterogeneous cell populations
- From 1970 until present: The Keller-Segel model in chemotaxis and its consequences. I
- Cellular pattern formation during Dictyostelium aggregation
- Bistability, wave pinning and localisation in natural reaction-diffusion systems
- An efficient, nonlinear stability analysis for detecting pattern formation in reaction diffusion systems
- Bespoke Turing systems
- Pulses in a Gierer--Meinhardt Equation with a Slow Nonlinearity
- pde2path - A Matlab Package for Continuation and Bifurcation in 2D Elliptic Systems
- The chemical basis of morphogenesis
- Significance of non-normality-induced patterns: Transient growth versus asymptotic stability
- History dependence and the continuum approximation breakdown: the impact of domain growth on Turing’s instability
- Bloom Formation and Turing Patterns in an Infochemical Mediated Multitrophic Plankton Model
- Turing instabilities in general systems
- VisualPDE: rapid interactive simulations of partial differential equations
- Degenerate Turing Bifurcation and the Birth of Localized Patterns in Activator-Inhibitor Systems
- Spatial heterogeneity localizes Turing patterns in reaction-cross-diffusion systems