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Pattern formation

The science of pattern formation deals with the visible, (statistically) orderly outcomes of self-organization and the common principles behind similar patterns in nature.

Pattern formation in a computational model of dendrite growth.

In developmental biology, pattern formation refers to the generation of complex organizations of cell fates in space and time. The role of genes in pattern formation is an aspect of morphogenesis, the creation of diverse anatomies from similar genes, now being explored in the science of evolutionary developmental biology or evo-devo. The mechanisms involved are well seen in the anterior-posterior patterning of embryos from the model organism Drosophila melanogaster (a fruit fly), one of the first organisms to have its morphogenesis studied, and in the eyespots of butterflies, whose development is a variant of the standard (fruit fly) mechanism.

Patterns in nature edit

Examples of pattern formation can be found in biology, physics, and science,[1] and can readily be simulated with computer graphics, as described in turn below.

Biology edit

Biological patterns such as animal markings, the segmentation of animals, and phyllotaxis are formed in different ways.[2]

In developmental biology, pattern formation describes the mechanism by which initially equivalent cells in a developing tissue in an embryo assume complex forms and functions.[3] Embryogenesis, such as of the fruit fly Drosophila, involves coordinated control of cell fates.[4][5][6] Pattern formation is genetically controlled, and often involves each cell in a field sensing and responding to its position along a morphogen gradient, followed by short distance cell-to-cell communication through cell signaling pathways to refine the initial pattern. In this context, a field of cells is the group of cells whose fates are affected by responding to the same set positional information cues. This conceptual model was first described as the French flag model in the 1960s.[7][8] More generally, the morphology of organisms is patterned by the mechanisms of evolutionary developmental biology, such as changing the timing and positioning of specific developmental events in the embryo.[9]

Possible mechanisms of pattern formation in biological systems include the classical reaction–diffusion model proposed by Alan Turing[10] and the more recently found elastic instability mechanism which is thought to be responsible for the fold patterns on the cerebral cortex of higher animals, among other things.[11][12]

Growth of colonies edit

Bacterial colonies show a large variety of patterns formed during colony growth. The resulting shapes depend on the growth conditions. In particular, stresses (hardness of the culture medium, lack of nutrients, etc.) enhance the complexity of the resulting patterns.[13] Other organisms such as slime moulds display remarkable patterns caused by the dynamics of chemical signaling.[14] Cellular embodiment (elongation and adhesion) can also have an impact on the developing patterns.[15]

Vegetation patterns edit

 
Tiger bush is a vegetation pattern that forms in arid conditions.

Vegetation patterns such as tiger bush[16] and fir waves[17] form for different reasons. Tiger bush consists of stripes of bushes on arid slopes in countries such as Niger where plant growth is limited by rainfall. Each roughly horizontal stripe of vegetation absorbs rainwater from the bare zone immediately above it.[16] In contrast, fir waves occur in forests on mountain slopes after wind disturbance, during regeneration. When trees fall, the trees that they had sheltered become exposed and are in turn more likely to be damaged, so gaps tend to expand downwind. Meanwhile, on the windward side, young trees grow, protected by the wind shadow of the remaining tall trees.[17] In flat terrains additional pattern morphologies appear besides stripes - hexagonal gap patterns and hexagonal spot patterns. Pattern formation in this case is driven by positive feedback loops between local vegetation growth and water transport towards the growth location.[18][19]

Chemistry edit

Pattern formation has been well studied in chemistry and chemical engineering, including both temperature and concentration patterns.[20] The Brusselator model developed by Ilya Prigogine and collaborators is one such example that exhibits Turing instability.[21] Pattern formation in chemical systems often involve oscillatory chemical kinetics or autocatalytic reactions[22] such as Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction or Briggs–Rauscher reaction. In industrial applications such as chemical reactors, pattern formation can lead to temperature hot spots which can reduce the yield or create hazardous safety problems such as a thermal runaway.[23][20] The emergence of pattern formation can be studied by mathematical modeling and simulation of the underlying reaction-diffusion system.[20][22]

Similarly as in chemical systems, patterns can develop in a weakly ionized plasma of a positive column of a glow discharge. In such cases creation and annihilation of charged particles due to collisions of atoms corresponds to reactions in chemical systems. Corresponding processes are essentially non-linear and lead in a discharge tube to formation of striations with regular or random character.[24][25]

Physics edit

When a planar body of fluid under the influence of gravity is heated from below, Rayleigh-Bénard convection can form organized cells in hexagons or other shapes. These patterns form on the surface of the Sun and in the mantle of the Earth as well as during more pedestrian processes. The interaction between rotation, gravity, and convection can cause planetary atmospheres to form patterns, as is seen in Saturn's hexagon and the Great Red Spot and stripes of Jupiter. The same processes cause ordered cloud formations on Earth, such as stripes and rolls.

In the 1980s Lugiato and Lefever developed a model of light propagation in an optical cavity that results in pattern formation by the exploitation of nonlinear effects.

Precipitating and solidifying materials can crystallize into intricate patterns, such as those seen in snowflakes and dendritic crystals.

Mathematics edit

Sphere packings and coverings. Mathematics underlies the other pattern formation mechanisms listed.

Computer graphics edit

 
Pattern resembling a reaction–diffusion model, produced using sharpen and blur

Some types of automata have been used to generate organic-looking textures for more realistic shading of 3d objects.[26][27]

A popular Photoshop plugin, KPT 6, included a filter called 'KPT reaction'. Reaction produced reaction–diffusion style patterns based on the supplied seed image.

A similar effect to the 'KPT reaction' can be achieved with convolution functions in digital image processing, with a little patience, by repeatedly sharpening and blurring an image in a graphics editor. If other filters are used, such as emboss or edge detection, different types of effects can be achieved.

Computers are often used to simulate the biological, physical or chemical processes that lead to pattern formation, and they can display the results in a realistic way. Calculations using models like reaction–diffusion or MClone are based on the actual mathematical equations designed by the scientists to model the studied phenomena.

References edit

  1. ^ Ball, 2009.
  2. ^ Ball, 2009. Shapes, pp. 231–252.
  3. ^ Ball, 2009. Shapes, pp. 261–290.
  4. ^ Eric C. Lai (March 2004). "Notch signaling: control of cell communication and cell fate". Development. 131 (5): 965–73. doi:10.1242/dev.01074. PMID 14973298. S2CID 6930563.
  5. ^ Melinda J. Tyler; David A. Cameron (2007). "Cellular pattern formation during retinal regeneration: A role for homotypic control of cell fate acquisition". Vision Research. 47 (4): 501–511. doi:10.1016/j.visres.2006.08.025. PMID 17034830. S2CID 15998615.
  6. ^ Hans Meinhard (2001-10-26). "Biological pattern formation: How cell[s] talk with each other to achieve reproducible pattern formation". Max-Planck-Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, Tübingen, Germany.
  7. ^ Wolpert L (October 1969). "Positional information and the spatial pattern of cellular differentiation". J. Theor. Biol. 25 (1): 1–47. Bibcode:1969JThBi..25....1W. doi:10.1016/S0022-5193(69)80016-0. PMID 4390734.
  8. ^ Wolpert, Lewis; et al. (2007). Principles of development (3rd ed.). Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-927536-6.
  9. ^ Hall, B. K. (2003). "Evo-Devo: evolutionary developmental mechanisms". International Journal of Developmental Biology. 47 (7–8): 491–495. PMID 14756324.
  10. ^ S. Kondo, T. Miura, "Reaction-Diffusion Model as a Framework for Understanding Biological Pattern Formation", Science 24 Sep 2010: Vol. 329, Issue 5999, pp. 1616-1620 DOI: 10.1126/science.1179047
  11. ^ Mercker, M; Brinkmann, F; Marciniak-Czochra, A; Richter, T (4 May 2016). "Beyond Turing: mechanochemical pattern formation in biological tissues". Biology Direct. 11: 22. doi:10.1186/s13062-016-0124-7. PMC 4857296. PMID 27145826.
  12. ^ Tallinen et al. Nature Physics 12, 588–593 (2016) doi:10.1038/nphys3632
  13. ^ Ball, 2009. Branches, pp. 52–59.
  14. ^ Ball, 2009. Shapes, pp. 149–151.
  15. ^ Duran-Nebreda, Salva; Pla, Jordi; Vidiella, Blai; Piñero, Jordi; Conde-Pueyo, Nuria; Solé, Ricard (2021-01-15). "Synthetic Lateral Inhibition in Periodic Pattern Forming Microbial Colonies". ACS Synthetic Biology. 10 (2): 277–285. doi:10.1021/acssynbio.0c00318. ISSN 2161-5063. PMC 8486170. PMID 33449631.
  16. ^ a b Tongway, D.J., Valentin, C. & Seghieri, J. (2001). Banded vegetation patterning in arid and semiarid environments. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-1-4612-6559-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ a b D'Avanzo, C. (22 February 2004). "Fir Waves: Regeneration in New England Conifer Forests". TIEE. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  18. ^ Meron, E (2019). "Vegetation pattern formation: the mechanisms behind the forms". Physics Today. 72 (11): 30–36. Bibcode:2019PhT....72k..30M. doi:10.1063/PT.3.4340. S2CID 209478350.
  19. ^ Meron, E (2018). "From Patterns to Function in Living Systems: Dryland Ecosystems as a Case Study". Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics. 9: 79–103. Bibcode:2018ARCMP...9...79M. doi:10.1146/annurev-conmatphys-033117-053959.
  20. ^ a b c Gupta, Ankur; Chakraborty, Saikat (January 2009). "Linear stability analysis of high- and low-dimensional models for describing mixing-limited pattern formation in homogeneous autocatalytic reactors". Chemical Engineering Journal. 145 (3): 399–411. doi:10.1016/j.cej.2008.08.025. ISSN 1385-8947.
  21. ^ Prigogine, I.; Nicolis, G. (1985), Hazewinkel, M.; Jurkovich, R.; Paelinck, J. H. P. (eds.), "Self-Organisation in Nonequilibrium Systems: Towards a Dynamics of Complexity", Bifurcation Analysis: Principles, Applications and Synthesis, Springer Netherlands, pp. 3–12, doi:10.1007/978-94-009-6239-2_1, ISBN 978-94-009-6239-2
  22. ^ a b Gupta, Ankur; Chakraborty, Saikat (2008-01-19). "Dynamic Simulation of Mixing-Limited Pattern Formation in Homogeneous Autocatalytic Reactions". Chemical Product and Process Modeling. 3 (2). doi:10.2202/1934-2659.1135. ISSN 1934-2659. S2CID 95837792.
  23. ^ Marwaha, Bharat; Sundarram, Sandhya; Luss, Dan (September 2004). "Dynamics of Transversal Hot Zones in Shallow Packed-Bed Reactors†". The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 108 (38): 14470–14476. doi:10.1021/jp049803p. ISSN 1520-6106.
  24. ^ Igor Grabec (1974). "Nonlinear Properties of High Amplitude Ionization Waves". The Physics of Fluids. 17 (10): 1834–1840. Bibcode:1974PhFl...17.1834G. doi:10.1063/1.1694626.
  25. ^ Igor Grabec; Simon Mandelj (2001). "Desynchronization of striations in the development of ionization turbulence". Physics Letters A. 287 (1–2): 105–110. Bibcode:2001PhLA..287..105G. doi:10.1016/S0375-9601(01)00406-6.
  26. ^ Greg Turk, Reaction–Diffusion
  27. ^ Andrew Witkin; Michael Kassy (1991). "Reaction-diffusion textures" (PDF). Proceedings of the 18th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques - SIGGRAPH '91. pp. 299–308. doi:10.1145/122718.122750. ISBN 0-89791-436-8. S2CID 207162368.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • , an educational website about the science of pattern formation, spirals in nature, and spirals in the mythic imagination (archived 14 May 2019)
  • '15-line Matlab code', A simple 15-line Matlab program to simulate 2D pattern formation for reaction-diffusion model.

pattern, formation, science, pattern, formation, deals, with, visible, statistically, orderly, outcomes, self, organization, common, principles, behind, similar, patterns, nature, source, source, source, source, computational, model, dendrite, growth, developm. The science of pattern formation deals with the visible statistically orderly outcomes of self organization and the common principles behind similar patterns in nature source source source source Pattern formation in a computational model of dendrite growth In developmental biology pattern formation refers to the generation of complex organizations of cell fates in space and time The role of genes in pattern formation is an aspect of morphogenesis the creation of diverse anatomies from similar genes now being explored in the science of evolutionary developmental biology or evo devo The mechanisms involved are well seen in the anterior posterior patterning of embryos from the model organism Drosophila melanogaster a fruit fly one of the first organisms to have its morphogenesis studied and in the eyespots of butterflies whose development is a variant of the standard fruit fly mechanism Contents 1 Patterns in nature 1 1 Biology 1 1 1 Growth of colonies 1 1 2 Vegetation patterns 1 2 Chemistry 1 3 Physics 1 4 Mathematics 1 5 Computer graphics 2 References 3 Bibliography 4 External linksPatterns in nature editFurther information Patterns in nature Examples of pattern formation can be found in biology physics and science 1 and can readily be simulated with computer graphics as described in turn below Biology edit Further information Evolutionary developmental biology and Morphogenetic field Biological patterns such as animal markings the segmentation of animals and phyllotaxis are formed in different ways 2 In developmental biology pattern formation describes the mechanism by which initially equivalent cells in a developing tissue in an embryo assume complex forms and functions 3 Embryogenesis such as of the fruit fly Drosophila involves coordinated control of cell fates 4 5 6 Pattern formation is genetically controlled and often involves each cell in a field sensing and responding to its position along a morphogen gradient followed by short distance cell to cell communication through cell signaling pathways to refine the initial pattern In this context a field of cells is the group of cells whose fates are affected by responding to the same set positional information cues This conceptual model was first described as the French flag model in the 1960s 7 8 More generally the morphology of organisms is patterned by the mechanisms of evolutionary developmental biology such as changing the timing and positioning of specific developmental events in the embryo 9 Possible mechanisms of pattern formation in biological systems include the classical reaction diffusion model proposed by Alan Turing 10 and the more recently found elastic instability mechanism which is thought to be responsible for the fold patterns on the cerebral cortex of higher animals among other things 11 12 Growth of colonies edit Bacterial colonies show a large variety of patterns formed during colony growth The resulting shapes depend on the growth conditions In particular stresses hardness of the culture medium lack of nutrients etc enhance the complexity of the resulting patterns 13 Other organisms such as slime moulds display remarkable patterns caused by the dynamics of chemical signaling 14 Cellular embodiment elongation and adhesion can also have an impact on the developing patterns 15 Vegetation patterns edit Main article patterned vegetation nbsp Tiger bush is a vegetation pattern that forms in arid conditions Vegetation patterns such as tiger bush 16 and fir waves 17 form for different reasons Tiger bush consists of stripes of bushes on arid slopes in countries such as Niger where plant growth is limited by rainfall Each roughly horizontal stripe of vegetation absorbs rainwater from the bare zone immediately above it 16 In contrast fir waves occur in forests on mountain slopes after wind disturbance during regeneration When trees fall the trees that they had sheltered become exposed and are in turn more likely to be damaged so gaps tend to expand downwind Meanwhile on the windward side young trees grow protected by the wind shadow of the remaining tall trees 17 In flat terrains additional pattern morphologies appear besides stripes hexagonal gap patterns and hexagonal spot patterns Pattern formation in this case is driven by positive feedback loops between local vegetation growth and water transport towards the growth location 18 19 Chemistry edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2013 Further information reaction diffusion system and Turing patternsPattern formation has been well studied in chemistry and chemical engineering including both temperature and concentration patterns 20 The Brusselator model developed by Ilya Prigogine and collaborators is one such example that exhibits Turing instability 21 Pattern formation in chemical systems often involve oscillatory chemical kinetics or autocatalytic reactions 22 such as Belousov Zhabotinsky reaction or Briggs Rauscher reaction In industrial applications such as chemical reactors pattern formation can lead to temperature hot spots which can reduce the yield or create hazardous safety problems such as a thermal runaway 23 20 The emergence of pattern formation can be studied by mathematical modeling and simulation of the underlying reaction diffusion system 20 22 Similarly as in chemical systems patterns can develop in a weakly ionized plasma of a positive column of a glow discharge In such cases creation and annihilation of charged particles due to collisions of atoms corresponds to reactions in chemical systems Corresponding processes are essentially non linear and lead in a discharge tube to formation of striations with regular or random character 24 25 Belousov Zhabotinsky reaction Liesegang rings Ionization wavesPhysics edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2013 When a planar body of fluid under the influence of gravity is heated from below Rayleigh Benard convection can form organized cells in hexagons or other shapes These patterns form on the surface of the Sun and in the mantle of the Earth as well as during more pedestrian processes The interaction between rotation gravity and convection can cause planetary atmospheres to form patterns as is seen in Saturn s hexagon and the Great Red Spot and stripes of Jupiter The same processes cause ordered cloud formations on Earth such as stripes and rolls In the 1980s Lugiato and Lefever developed a model of light propagation in an optical cavity that results in pattern formation by the exploitation of nonlinear effects Precipitating and solidifying materials can crystallize into intricate patterns such as those seen in snowflakes and dendritic crystals Mathematics edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2013 Sphere packings and coverings Mathematics underlies the other pattern formation mechanisms listed Further information Gradient pattern analysis Computer graphics edit nbsp Pattern resembling a reaction diffusion model produced using sharpen and blurFurther information Cellular automaton Some types of automata have been used to generate organic looking textures for more realistic shading of 3d objects 26 27 A popular Photoshop plugin KPT 6 included a filter called KPT reaction Reaction produced reaction diffusion style patterns based on the supplied seed image A similar effect to the KPT reaction can be achieved with convolution functions in digital image processing with a little patience by repeatedly sharpening and blurring an image in a graphics editor If other filters are used such as emboss or edge detection different types of effects can be achieved Computers are often used to simulate the biological physical or chemical processes that lead to pattern formation and they can display the results in a realistic way Calculations using models like reaction diffusion or MClone are based on the actual mathematical equations designed by the scientists to model the studied phenomena References edit Ball 2009 Ball 2009 Shapes pp 231 252 Ball 2009 Shapes pp 261 290 Eric C Lai March 2004 Notch signaling control of cell communication and cell fate Development 131 5 965 73 doi 10 1242 dev 01074 PMID 14973298 S2CID 6930563 Melinda J Tyler David A Cameron 2007 Cellular pattern formation during retinal regeneration A role for homotypic control of cell fate acquisition Vision Research 47 4 501 511 doi 10 1016 j visres 2006 08 025 PMID 17034830 S2CID 15998615 Hans Meinhard 2001 10 26 Biological pattern formation How cell s talk with each other to achieve reproducible pattern formation Max Planck Institut fur Entwicklungsbiologie Tubingen Germany Wolpert L October 1969 Positional information and the spatial pattern of cellular differentiation J Theor Biol 25 1 1 47 Bibcode 1969JThBi 25 1W doi 10 1016 S0022 5193 69 80016 0 PMID 4390734 Wolpert Lewis et al 2007 Principles of development 3rd ed Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927536 6 Hall B K 2003 Evo Devo evolutionary developmental mechanisms International Journal of Developmental Biology 47 7 8 491 495 PMID 14756324 S Kondo T Miura Reaction Diffusion Model as a Framework for Understanding Biological Pattern Formation Science 24 Sep 2010 Vol 329 Issue 5999 pp 1616 1620 DOI 10 1126 science 1179047 Mercker M Brinkmann F Marciniak Czochra A Richter T 4 May 2016 Beyond Turing mechanochemical pattern formation in biological tissues Biology Direct 11 22 doi 10 1186 s13062 016 0124 7 PMC 4857296 PMID 27145826 Tallinen et al Nature Physics 12 588 593 2016 doi 10 1038 nphys3632 Ball 2009 Branches pp 52 59 Ball 2009 Shapes pp 149 151 Duran Nebreda Salva Pla Jordi Vidiella Blai Pinero Jordi Conde Pueyo Nuria Sole Ricard 2021 01 15 Synthetic Lateral Inhibition in Periodic Pattern Forming Microbial Colonies ACS Synthetic Biology 10 2 277 285 doi 10 1021 acssynbio 0c00318 ISSN 2161 5063 PMC 8486170 PMID 33449631 a b Tongway D J Valentin C amp Seghieri J 2001 Banded vegetation patterning in arid and semiarid environments New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 1 4612 6559 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b D Avanzo C 22 February 2004 Fir Waves Regeneration in New England Conifer Forests TIEE Retrieved 26 May 2012 Meron E 2019 Vegetation pattern formation the mechanisms behind the forms Physics Today 72 11 30 36 Bibcode 2019PhT 72k 30M doi 10 1063 PT 3 4340 S2CID 209478350 Meron E 2018 From Patterns to Function in Living Systems Dryland Ecosystems as a Case Study Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics 9 79 103 Bibcode 2018ARCMP 9 79M doi 10 1146 annurev conmatphys 033117 053959 a b c Gupta Ankur Chakraborty Saikat January 2009 Linear stability analysis of high and low dimensional models for describing mixing limited pattern formation in homogeneous autocatalytic reactors Chemical Engineering Journal 145 3 399 411 doi 10 1016 j cej 2008 08 025 ISSN 1385 8947 Prigogine I Nicolis G 1985 Hazewinkel M Jurkovich R Paelinck J H P eds Self Organisation in Nonequilibrium Systems Towards a Dynamics of Complexity Bifurcation Analysis Principles Applications and Synthesis Springer Netherlands pp 3 12 doi 10 1007 978 94 009 6239 2 1 ISBN 978 94 009 6239 2 a b Gupta Ankur Chakraborty Saikat 2008 01 19 Dynamic Simulation of Mixing Limited Pattern Formation in Homogeneous Autocatalytic Reactions Chemical Product and Process Modeling 3 2 doi 10 2202 1934 2659 1135 ISSN 1934 2659 S2CID 95837792 Marwaha Bharat Sundarram Sandhya Luss Dan September 2004 Dynamics of Transversal Hot Zones in Shallow Packed Bed Reactors The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 108 38 14470 14476 doi 10 1021 jp049803p ISSN 1520 6106 Igor Grabec 1974 Nonlinear Properties of High Amplitude Ionization Waves The Physics of Fluids 17 10 1834 1840 Bibcode 1974PhFl 17 1834G doi 10 1063 1 1694626 Igor Grabec Simon Mandelj 2001 Desynchronization of striations in the development of ionization turbulence Physics Letters A 287 1 2 105 110 Bibcode 2001PhLA 287 105G doi 10 1016 S0375 9601 01 00406 6 Greg Turk Reaction Diffusion Andrew Witkin Michael Kassy 1991 Reaction diffusion textures PDF Proceedings of the 18th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques SIGGRAPH 91 pp 299 308 doi 10 1145 122718 122750 ISBN 0 89791 436 8 S2CID 207162368 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Bibliography editBall Philip 2009 Nature s Patterns a tapestry in three parts 1 Shapes 2 Flow 3 Branches Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 960486 9 External links editSpiralZoom com an educational website about the science of pattern formation spirals in nature and spirals in the mythic imagination archived 14 May 2019 15 line Matlab code A simple 15 line Matlab program to simulate 2D pattern formation for reaction diffusion model Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pattern formation amp oldid 1207898322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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