Properties of biological mutation networks and their implications for alife

  • Authors:
  • Alastair P. Droop;Simon J. Hickinbotham

  • Affiliations:
  • University of York;University of York

  • Venue:
  • Artificial Life
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

We report a study of networks constructed from mutation patterns observed in biology. These networks form evolutionary trajectories, which allow for both frequent substitution of closely related structures, and a small evolutionary distance between any two structures. These two properties define the small-world phenomenon. The mutation behavior between tokens in an evolvable artificial chemistry determines its ability to explore evolutionary space. This concept is underrepresented in previous work on string-based chemistries. We argue that small-world mutation networks will confer better exploration of the evolutionary space than either random or fully regular mutation strategies. We calculate network statistics from two data sets: amino acid substitution matrices, and codon-level single point mutations. The first class are observed data from protein alignments; while the second class is defined by the standard genetic code that is used to translate RNA into amino acids. We report a methodology for creating small-world mutation networks for artificial chemistries with arbitrary node count and connectivity. We argue that ALife systems would benefit from this approach, as it delivers a more viable exploration of evolutionary space.