Finite State Projection for Approximating the Stationary Solution to the Chemical Master Equation Using Reaction Rate Equations.

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2019
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Abstract
When modeling a physical system using a Markov chain, it is often instructive to compute its probability distribution at statistical equilibrium, thereby gaining insight into the stationary, or long-term, behavior of the system. Computing such a distribution directly is problematic when the state space of the system is large. Here, we look at the case of a chemical reaction system that models the dynamics of cellular processes, where it has become popular to constrain the computational burden by using a finite state projection, which aims only to capture the most likely states of the system, rather than every possible state. We propose an efficient method to further narrow these states to those that remain highly probable in the long run, after the transient behavior of the system has dissipated. Our strategy is to quickly estimate the local maxima of the stationary distribution using the reaction rate formulation, which is of considerably smaller size than the full-blown chemical master equation, and from there develop adaptive schemes to profile the distribution around the maxima. We include numerical tests that show the efficiency of our approach.
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reid2019finitemathematical Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Reid, Brandon M;Sidje, Roger B;
Journal Mathematical biosciences
Year 2019
DOI S0025-5564(19)30177-4
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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