Decomposing the local arrow of time in interacting systems
ORAL
Abstract
Living systems are fundamentally irreversible, breaking detailed balance and establishing an arrow of time. But how does the evident arrow of time for a whole system arise from the interactions among its multiple elements? We show that the local evidence for the arrow of time, which is the entropy production for thermodynamic systems, can be decomposed. First, it can be split into two components: an independent term reflecting the dynamics of individual elements and an interaction term driven by the dependencies among elements. Adapting tools from non-equilibrium physics, we further decompose the interaction term into contributions from pairs of elements, triplets, and higher-order terms. We illustrate our methods on models of cellular sensing and logical computations, as well as on patterns of neural activity in the retina as it responds to visual inputs. We find that neural activity can define the arrow of time even when the visual inputs do not, and that the dominant contribution to this breaking of detailed balance comes from interactions among pairs of neurons.
*This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation, through the Center for the Physics of Biological Function (PHY-1734030) and a Graduate Research Fellowship (CMH); by a James S McDonnell Foundation 21st Century Science Initiative Understanding Dynamic and Multi-scale Systems - Postdoctoral Fellowship Award (CWL); by the National Institutes of Health BRAIN initiative (R01EB026943); by the Simons Foundation; and by a Sloan Research Fellowship (DJS).
–
Publication: Christopher W. Lynn, Caroline M. Holmes, William Bialek, and David J. Schwab. Decomposing the local arrow of time in interacting systems. In preparation.
Presenters
-
Christopher W Lynn
- Princeton University
- City University of New York