Leaderless deterministic chemical reaction networks

Abstract

This paper answers an open question of Chen, Doty, and Soloveichik [1], who showed that a function f:Nk --> Nl is deterministically computable by a stochastic chemical reaction network (CRN) if and only if the graph of f is a semilinear subset of Nk+l. That construction crucially used "leaders": the ability to start in an initial configuration with constant but non-zero counts of species other than the k species X1,...,Xk representing the input to the function f. The authors asked whether deterministic CRNs without a leader retain the same power. We answer this question affirmatively, showing that every semilinear function is deterministically computable by a CRN whose initial configuration contains only the input species X1,...,Xk, and zero counts of every other species. We show that this CRN completes in expected time O(n), where n is the total number of input molecules. This time bound is slower than the O(log5 n) achieved in [1], but faster than the O(n log n) achieved by the direct construction of [1] (Theorem 4.1 in the latest online version of [1]), since the fast construction of that paper (Theorem 4.4) relied heavily on the use of a fast, error-prone CRN that computes arbitrary computable functions, and which crucially uses a leader.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…