Publications by authors named "Ding Lyu"

Article Synopsis
  • Cooperation is seen as a selfless act where individuals contribute to public goods for the benefit of their communities, but it struggles to persist because defecting often yields better individual rewards.
  • Recent studies are examining how shifting environments and player strategies affect cooperation in complex social networks, but not enough focus is given to the role of degree heterogeneity in these networks.
  • The research models a Public Goods Game that shows that higher cooperation can be achieved with favorable initial environmental factors, but if social network heterogeneity becomes too extreme, it can actually reduce cooperation levels.
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Marine animals possess genomes of considerable complexity and heterozygosity. Their unique reproductive system, characterized by high fecundity and substantial early mortality rates, increases the risk of inbreeding, potentially leading to severe inbreeding depression during various larval developmental stages. In this study, we established a set of inbred families of , with an inbreeding coefficient of 0.

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Understanding inbreeding depressions (IBDs), the effect on the phenotypic performance of inbreeding, is of major importance for evolution and conservation genetics. Inbreeding depressions in aquatic animals were well documented in a domestic or captive population, while there is less evidence of inbreeding depression in natural populations. Chinese shrimp, , is an important species in both aquaculture and fishery activities in China.

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This paper reports on the latest refinement of the Finite Element Global Human Body Models Consortium 50th percentile (GHBMC M50) adult male head model by the development and incorporation of a new material model into the white matter tissue of the brain. The white matter is represented by an anisotropic visco-hyperelastic material model capable of simulating direction-dependent response of the brain tissue to further improve the bio-fidelity and injury predictive capability of the model. The parameters representing the material were optimized by comparing model responses to seven experimentally reported strain responses of brains of postmortem human subjects (PMHS) subjected to head impact.

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The Pacific white shrimp () is the most widely cultured shrimp in the world. A great attention has been paid to improve its body weight (BW) at harvest through genetic selection for decades. Genome-wide association study (GWAS) is a tool to dissect the genetic basis of the traits.

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