Published January 19, 2014 | Submitted
Discussion Paper Open

The Capacity of String-Replication Systems

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Abstract

It is known that the majority of the human genome consists of repeated sequences. Furthermore, it is believed that a significant part of the rest of the genome also originated from repeated sequences and has mutated to its current form. In this paper, we investigate the possibility of constructing an exponentially large number of sequences from a short initial sequence and simple replication rules, including those resembling genomic replication processes. In other words, our goal is to find out the capacity, or the expressive power, of these string-replication systems. Our results include exact capacities, and bounds on the capacities, of four fundamental string-replication systems.

Additional Information

This work was supported in part by the NSF Expeditions in Computing Program (The Molecular Programming Project).

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August 19, 2023
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