Does this fittest always survive?

This Wednesday 2/29 our speaker is Konstantinos Gourgoulias. He will be talking about an application of game theory to a biological problem. Come join us for pizza and soda with the talk at 5:30 in LGRT 1634!

Abstract:

In this talk, I will present a very simple model of the interactions between four strains of the e. Coli bacterium. First of all, we will get to know the important difference between them and how that difference can be exploited in the construction of the model. Then we will see how we can use that model to get some results back and why those results could mean anything in the real world. By the end of the talk, you will have gained an idea of both the challenges and the usefulness of applied mathematics, hopefully without even realizing it.

I would really like this to be an interactive talk, so I won’t get into more specifics. Some tags for this talk could be : simulation, evolutionary game theory and (naive) Monte Carlo methods. Not familiar with those terms? Don’t worry cause I will explain anything needed.

Oh, and did I mention that we will have videos from simulations, too?