Affiliation:
1. Department of Complexity Science and Engineering, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of Tokyo , Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8561, Japan
Abstract
This study deals with an existing mathematical model of asymmetrically interacting agents. We analyze the following two previously unfocused features of the model: (i) synchronization of growth rates and (ii) initial value dependence of damped oscillation. By applying the techniques of variable transformation and timescale separation, we perform the stability analysis of a diverging solution. We find that (i) all growth rates synchronize to the same value that is as small as the smallest growth rate and (ii) oscillatory dynamics appear if the initial value of the slowest-growing agent is sufficiently small. Furthermore, our analytical method proposes a way to apply stability analysis to an exponentially diverging solution, which we believe is also a contribution of this study. Although the employed model is originally proposed as a model of infectious disease, we do not discuss its biological relevance but merely focus on the technical aspects.
Subject
Applied Mathematics,General Physics and Astronomy,Mathematical Physics,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics