Результаты поиска по 'interaction':
Найдено статей: 194
  1. Pertsev N.V., Loginov K.K.
    Modeling the initial period of HIV-1 infection spread in the lymph node based on delay differential equations
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2025, v. 17, no. 6, pp. 1181-1203

    A mathematical model describing the dynamics of HIV-1 infection in a single lymph node during the initial period of infection development is presented. Within the framework of the model, the infection of an individual is set by a nonnegative finite function describing the rate of entry of the initial viral particles into the lymph node. The equations of the model are derived with consideration of two factors: 1) the interaction of viral particles with naive CD4+ T lymphocytes in various phases of the cell cycle; 2) contact interaction between multiplying naive CD4+ T lymphocytes and infected CD4+ T lymphocytes producing viral particles. The specific feature of intercellular contact interactions is the formation of complexes consisting of pairs of these cells. The duration of the complexes’ existence is determined by the distribution functions over finite time intervals. The model is presented as a high-dimensional system of nonlinear delay differential equations, including two equations with distributed delay, and is supplemented with non-negative initial data. In the absence of HIV-1 infection, the model is reduced to four delay differential equations describing the number of naive CD4+ T-lymphocytes in different phases of the cell cycle. The global solvability of the model (the existence and uniqueness of the solution on the semi-axis) is determined, and the non-negativity of the solution components is established. To carry out computational experiments with the model, an algorithm for numerically solving the used system of differential equations are developed based on the semi-implicit Euler scheme for the case of uniform distribution of durations of the complexes existence. The results of computational experiments aimed at approximation the numerical solution of the model to describing the kinetics of HIV-1 infection spread in its acute phase, including the eclipse phase, are presented. The variable used as the observable is the variable describing the number of viral particles per milliliter of blood on days 10–12 after the onset of acute infection. The dynamics of the observable variable is numerically studied depending on the variation of the model parameters reflecting the patterns of complex formation and the formation of cells producing viral particles. The possibility of attenuation of HIV-1 infection in the lymph node at certain values of some of the model parameters is shown.

  2. Maksimenko M.V., Tikhonov A.A.
    Modification of the electrodynamic method for spacecraft attitude stabilization at circumpolar orbits
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2026, v. 18, no. 1, pp. 149-168

    For the three-axis stabilization of the spacecraft in the orbital coordinate system, including in the indirect equilibrium position, an electrodynamic control method is used based on the simultaneous use of two control torques that affect the dynamics of the spacecraft’s rotational motion in the Earth’s magnetic field (EMF), namely, the Lorentz torque and the torque of magnetic interaction. It is assumed that the spacecraft, equipped with an electric charge with a controlled vector of static moment of charge of the first order and a controlled intrinsic magnetic moment, moves in a Keplerian circular Earth orbit of arbitrary inclination. It was previously shown that combining two control systems, magnetic and Lorentz control, into a single electrodynamic control system (EDCS) makes it possible to successfully solve various problems of controlling the angular motion of spacecraft. Unlike many well-known studies performed for one or another approximate EMF model, this work does not impose restrictions on the accuracy of the EMF approximation. Previous studies have shown the limited capabilities of the EDCS for spacecraft moving in orbits close to the polar ones, due to the presence in this case of such points on the spacecraft trajectory in which it is possible for the lines of action of the geomagnetic induction vector and the spacecraft velocity vector relative to the EMF. Therefore, in this paper, the problem of overcoming these difficulties is posed and solved. A modification of the EDCS is proposed, based, firstly, on optimizing the control of the angular motion of the spacecraft and, secondly, on limiting the maximum value of the modulus of the vector of the center of charge relative to the center of mass of the spacecraft, which must be created during control. A method for selecting parameters for a modified EMF is recommended. The presented results of numerical experiments for spacecraft located in polar and circumpolar orbits not only demonstrate the operability of the proposed modification of the EDCS, but also indicate the possibility of technical implementation of the modified electrodynamic method of three-axis spacecraft stabilization.

  3. Shamiev M.O., Trofimov A.G.
    Learning spatio-temporal precursors of dam instability using a CNN–BiGRU framework
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2026, v. 18, no. 2, pp. 377-397

    Dam safety assessment increasingly relies on continuous monitoring of hydrometeorological variables; however, identifying early-stage instability remains challenging due to complex spatio-temporal interactions and highly imbalanced failure observations. This study proposes a deep learning framework based on a Convolutional Bidirectional Gated Recurrent Unit (CNN–BiGRU) architecture to learn spatio-temporal precursors of dam instability from multivariate hydrometeorological time series. The convolutional component extracts localized temporal patterns associated with short-term fluctuations, while the bidirectional recurrent structure captures long-range dependencies and evolving dynamics preceding critical states.

    The proposed model is evaluated on a real-world dam monitoring dataset comprising multiple water-level, meteorological, and derived dynamic indicators. To address class imbalance, a cost-sensitive training strategy using class weighting is adopted without synthetic oversampling. Experimental results demonstrate strong predictive performance, achieving an accuracy of 0.961, precision of 0.901, recall of 0.757, and an F1-score of 0.823. The model further attains a ROC-AUC of 0.907 and a PR-AUC of 0.819, indicating robust discrimination capability under imbalanced conditions.

    Feature importance analysis reveals that short- and medium-term water level variability, including rolling standard deviation, volatility, and multi-scale gradients, play a dominant role in characterizing pre-instability behavior, providing physically interpretable insights into dam response dynamics. The findings suggest that the CNN–BiGRU framework effectively captures meaningful spatio-temporal precursors and offers a reliable data-driven tool for supporting dam safety monitoring and decision-making under real operational conditions.

  4. Sobolev O.V., Lunina N.L., Lunin V.Yu.
    The use of cluster analysis methods for the study of a set of feasible solutions of the phase problem in biological crystallography
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2010, v. 2, no. 1, pp. 91-101

    X-ray diffraction experiment allows determining of magnitudes of complex coefficients in the decomposition of the studied electron density distribution into Fourier series. The determination of the lost in the experiment phase values poses the central problem of the method, namely the phase problem. Some methods for solving of the phase problem result in a set of feasible solutions. Cluster analysis method may be used to investigate the composition of this set and to extract one or several typical solutions. An essential feature of the approach is the estimation of the closeness of two solutions by the map correlation between two aligned Fourier syntheses calculated with the use of phase sets under comparison. An interactive computer program ClanGR was designed to perform this analysis.

    Views (last year): 2.
  5. Orlova E.V.
    Model for economic interests agreement in duopoly’s making price decisions
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2015, v. 7, no. 6, pp. 1309-1329

    The model of market pricing in duopoly describing the prices dynamics as a two-dimensional map is presented. It is shown that the fixed point of the map coincides with the local Nash-equilibrium price in duopoly game. There have been numerically identified a bifurcation of the fixed point, shown the scheme of transition from periodic to chaotic mode through a doubling period. To ensure the sustainability of local Nashequilibrium price the controlling chaos mechanism has been proposed. This mechanism allows to harmonize the economic interests of the firms and to form the balanced pricing policy.

    Views (last year): 10. Citations: 2 (RSCI).
  6. Epifanov A.V., Tsybulin V.G.
    Regarding the dynamics of cosymmetric predator – prey systems
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2017, v. 9, no. 5, pp. 799-813

    To study nonlinear effects of biological species interactions numerical-analytical approach is being developed. The approach is based on the cosymmetry theory accounting for the phenomenon of the emergence of a continuous family of solutions to differential equations where each solution can be obtained from the appropriate initial state. In problems of mathematical ecology the onset of cosymmetry is usually connected with a number of relationships between the parameters of the system. When the relationships collapse families vanish, we get a finite number of isolated solutions instead of a continuum of solutions and transient process can be long-term, dynamics taking place in a neighborhood of a family that has vanished due to cosymmetry collapse.

    We consider a model for spatiotemporal competition of predators or prey with an account for directed migration, Holling type II functional response and nonlinear prey growth function permitting Alley effect. We found out the conditions on system parameters under which there is linear with respect to population densities cosymmetry. It is demonstated that cosymmetry exists for any resource function in case of heterogeneous habitat. Numerical experiment in MATLAB is applied to compute steady states and oscillatory regimes in case of spatial heterogeneity.

    The dynamics of three population interactions (two predators and a prey, two prey and a predator) are considered. The onset of families of stationary distributions and limit cycle branching out of equlibria of a family that lose stability are investigated in case of homogeneous habitat. The study of the system for two prey and a predator gave a wonderful result of species coexistence. We have found out parameter regions where three families of stable solutions can be realized: coexistence of two prey in absence of a predator, stationary and oscillatory distributions of three coexisting species. Cosymmetry collapse is analyzed and long-term transient dynamics leading to solutions with the exclusion of one of prey or extinction of a predator is established in the numerical experiment.

    Views (last year): 12. Citations: 3 (RSCI).
  7. Krasnyakov I.V., Bratsun D.A., Pismen L.M.
    Mathematical modeling of carcinoma growth with a dynamic change in the phenotype of cells
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2018, v. 10, no. 6, pp. 879-902

    In this paper, we proposed a two-dimensional chemo-mechanical model of the growth of invasive carcinoma in epithelial tissue. Each cell is modeled by an elastic polygon, changing its shape and size under the influence of pressure forces acting from the tissue. The average size and shape of the cells have been calibrated on the basis of experimental data. The model allows to describe the dynamic deformations in epithelial tissue as a collective evolution of cells interacting through the exchange of mechanical and chemical signals. The general direction of tumor growth is controlled by a pre-established linear gradient of nutrient concentration. Growth and deformation of the tissue occurs due to the mechanisms of cell division and intercalation. We assume that carcinoma has a heterogeneous structure made up of cells of different phenotypes that perform various functions in the tumor. The main parameter that determines the phenotype of a cell is the degree of its adhesion to the adjacent cells. Three main phenotypes of cancer cells are distinguished: the epithelial (E) phenotype is represented by internal tumor cells, the mesenchymal (M) phenotype is represented by single cells and the intermediate phenotype is represented by the frontal tumor cells. We assume also that the phenotype of each cell under certain conditions can change dynamically due to epithelial-mesenchymal (EM) and inverse (ME) transitions. As for normal cells, we define the main E-phenotype, which is represented by ordinary cells with strong adhesion to each other. In addition, the normal cells that are adjacent to the tumor undergo a forced EM-transition and form an M-phenotype of healthy cells. Numerical simulations have shown that, depending on the values of the control parameters as well as a combination of possible phenotypes of healthy and cancer cells, the evolution of the tumor can result in a variety of cancer structures reflecting the self-organization of tumor cells of different phenotypes. We compare the structures obtained numerically with the morphological structures revealed in clinical studies of breast carcinoma: trabecular, solid, tubular, alveolar and discrete tumor structures with ameboid migration. The possible scenario of morphogenesis for each structure is discussed. We describe also the metastatic process during which a single cancer cell of ameboid phenotype moves due to intercalation in healthy epithelial tissue, then divides and undergoes a ME transition with the appearance of a secondary tumor.

    Views (last year): 46.
  8. Grinevich A.A., Yakushevich L.V.
    On the computer experiments of Kasman
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2019, v. 11, no. 3, pp. 503-513

    In 2007 Kasman conducted a series of original computer experiments with sine-Gordon kinks moving along artificial DNA sequences. Two sequences were considered. Each consisted of two parts separated by a boundary. The left part of the first sequence contained repeating TTA triplets that encode leucines, and the right part contained repeating CGC triplets that encode arginines. In the second sequence, the left part contained repeating CTG triplets encoding leucines, and the right part contained repeating AGA triplets encoding arginines. When modeling the kink movement, an interesting effect was discovered. It turned out that the kink, moving in one of the sequences, stopped without reaching the end of the sequence, and then “bounced off” as if he had hit a wall. At the same time, the kink movement in the other sequence did not stop during the entire time of the experiment. In these computer experiments, however, a simple DNA model proposed by Salerno was used. It takes into account differences in the interactions of complementary bases within pairs, but does not take into account differences in the moments of inertia of nitrogenous bases and in the distances between the centers of mass of the bases and the sugar-phosphate chain. The question of whether the Kasman effect will continue with the use of more accurate DNA models is still open. In this paper, we investigate the Kasman effect on the basis of a more accurate DNA model that takes both of these differences into account. We obtained the energy profiles of Kasman's sequences and constructed the trajectories of the motion of kinks launched in these sequences with different initial values of the energy. The results of our investigations confirmed the existence of the Kasman effect, but only in a limited interval of initial values of the kink energy and with a certain direction of the kinks movement. In other cases, this effect did not observe. We discussed which of the studied sequences were energetically preferable for the excitation and propagation of kinks.

    Views (last year): 23.
  9. Vornovskikh P.A., Kim A., Prokhorov I.V.
    The applicability of the approximation of single scattering in pulsed sensing of an inhomogeneous medium
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2020, v. 12, no. 5, pp. 1063-1079

    The mathematical model based on the linear integro-differential Boltzmann equation is considered in this article. The model describes the radiation transfer in the scattering medium irradiated by a point source. The inverse problem for the transfer equation is defined. This problem consists of determining the scattering coefficient from the time-angular distribution of the radiation flux density at a given point in space. The Neumann series representation for solving the radiation transfer equation is analyzed in the study of the inverse problem. The zero member of the series describes the unscattered radiation, the first member of the series describes a single-scattered field, the remaining members of the series describe a multiple-scattered field. When calculating the approximate solution of the radiation transfer equation, the single scattering approximation is widespread to calculated an approximate solution of the equation for regions with a small optical thickness and a low level of scattering. An analytical formula is obtained for finding the scattering coefficient by using this approximation for problem with additional restrictions on the initial data. To verify the adequacy of the obtained formula the Monte Carlo weighted method for solving the transfer equation is constructed and software implemented taking into account multiple scattering in the medium and the space-time singularity of the radiation source. As applied to the problems of high-frequency acoustic sensing in the ocean, computational experiments were carried out. The application of the single scattering approximation is justified, at least, at a sensing range of about one hundred meters and the double and triple scattered fields make the main impact on the formula error. For larger regions, the single scattering approximation gives at the best only a qualitative evaluation of the medium structure, sometimes it even does not allow to determine the order of the parameters quantitative characteristics of the interaction of radiation with matter.

  10. Yakushevich L.V.
    From homogeneous to inhomogeneous electronic analogue of DNA
    Computer Research and Modeling, 2020, v. 12, no. 6, pp. 1397-1407

    In this work, the problem of constructing an electronic analogue of heterogeneous DNA is solved with the help of the methods of mathematical modeling. Electronic analogs of that type, along with other physical models of living systems, are widely used as a tool for studying the dynamic and functional properties of these systems. The solution to the problem is based on an algorithm previously developed for homogeneous (synthetic) DNA and modified in such a way that it can be used for the case of inhomogeneous (native) DNA. The algorithm includes the following steps: selection of a model that simulates the internal mobility of DNA; construction of a transformation that allows you to move from the DNA model to its electronic analogue; search for conditions that provide an analogy of DNA equations and electronic analogue equations; calculation of the parameters of the equivalent electrical circuit. To describe inhomogeneous DNA, the model was chosen that is a system of discrete nonlinear differential equations simulating the angular deviations of nitrogenous bases, and Hamiltonian corresponding to these equations. The values of the coefficients in the model equations are completely determined by the dynamic parameters of the DNA molecule, including the moments of inertia of nitrous bases, the rigidity of the sugar-phosphate chain, and the constants characterizing the interactions between complementary bases in pairs. The inhomogeneous Josephson line was used as a basis for constructing an electronic model, the equivalent circuit of which contains four types of cells: A-, T-, G-, and C-cells. Each cell, in turn, consists of three elements: capacitance, inductance, and Josephson junction. It is important that the A-, T-, G- and C-cells of the Josephson line are arranged in a specific order, which is similar to the order of the nitrogenous bases (A, T, G and C) in the DNA sequence. The transition from DNA to an electronic analog was carried out with the help of the A-transformation which made it possible to calculate the values of the capacitance, inductance, and Josephson junction in the A-cells. The parameter values for the T-, G-, and C-cells of the equivalent electrical circuit were obtained from the conditions imposed on the coefficients of the model equations and providing an analogy between DNA and the electronic model.

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