Optimal decision making for sperm chemotaxis in the presence of noise
Justus A. Kromer, Steffen M\"arcker, Steffen Lange, Christel Baier,, and Benjamin M. Friedrich

TL;DR
This paper investigates how sperm cells navigate chemical gradients under noisy conditions, revealing a trade-off between speed and reliability, and proposing a decision-making strategy that improves target finding in noisy environments.
Contribution
It introduces a Markov decision process framework for optimal navigation under noise, demonstrating benefits of dynamic switching between steering modes in chemotaxis.
Findings
Dynamic switching enhances target detection probability.
Decision making is most beneficial at intermediate signal-to-noise ratios.
The theory explains experimental observations in sea urchin sperm chemotaxis.
Abstract
For navigation, microscopic agents such as biological cells rely on noisy sensory input. In cells performing chemotaxis, such noise arises from the stochastic binding of signaling molecules at low concentrations. Using chemotaxis of sperm cells as application example, we address the classic problem of chemotaxis towards a single target. We reveal a fundamental relationship between the speed of chemotactic steering and the strength of directional fluctuations that result from the amplification of noise in the chemical input signal. This relation implies a trade-off between slow, but reliable, and fast, but less reliable, steering. By formulating the problem of optimal navigation in the presence of noise as a Markov decision process, we show that dynamic switching between reliable and fast steering substantially increases the probability to find a target, such as the egg. Intriguingly,…
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