Mathematical link of evolving aging and complexity
Byung Mook Weon, Jung Ho Je

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new mathematical survival function linking aging and complexity in living systems, highlighting how complexity diminishes with age and influences survival patterns.
Contribution
It proposes a flexible survival function derived from the stretched exponential, connecting aging dynamics with evolving complexity through an age-dependent exponent.
Findings
Survival curves can be modeled by the proposed function.
Healthy populations tend toward rectangular survival curves.
The model links complexity loss with aging dynamics.
Abstract
Aging is a fundamental aspect of living systems that undergo a progressive deterioration of physiological function with age and an increase of vulnerability to disease and death. Living systems, known as complex systems, require complexity in interactions among molecules, cells, organs, and individuals or regulatory mechanisms to perform a variety of activities for survival. On this basis, aging can be understood in terms of a progressive loss of complexity with age; this suggests that complexity in living systems would evolve with age. In general, aging dynamics is mathematically depicted by a survival function, which monotonically changes from 1 to 0 with age. It would be then useful to find an adequate survival function to link aging dynamics and complexity evolution. Here we describe a flexible survival function, which is derived from the stretched exponential function by adopting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms · Ecosystem dynamics and resilience
