Collective Sensing-Capacity of Bacteria Populations
Arash Einolghozati, Mohsen Sardari, Faramarz Fekri

TL;DR
This paper investigates the maximum information transfer capacity of bacterial populations acting as biological nodes in molecular communication networks, considering noise and variability in sensing and output processes.
Contribution
It introduces a model for the collective sensing capacity of bacteria populations, analyzing how noise and population size affect information transfer in molecular communication.
Findings
Capacity increases with the number of bacteria and receptors
Noise from molecular trapping and bacterial variability limits capacity
Specific molecular signaling schemes impact sensing performance
Abstract
The design of biological networks using bacteria as the basic elements of the network is initially motivated by a phenomenon called quorum sensing. Through quorum sensing, each bacterium performs sensing the medium and communicating it to others via molecular communication. As a result, bacteria can orchestrate and act collectively and perform tasks impossible otherwise. In this paper, we consider a population of bacteria as a single node in a network. In our version of biological communication networks, such a node would communicate with one another via molecular signals. As a first step toward such networks, this paper focuses on the study of the transfer of information to the population (i.e., the node) by stimulating it with a concentration of special type of a molecules signal. These molecules trigger a chain of processes inside each bacteria that results in a final output in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Gene Regulatory Network Analysis · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
