Abstract

The simulation of population dynamics and social processes is of great interest in nonlinear systems. Recently, many scholars have paid attention to the possible applications of population dynamics models, such as the competitive Lotka–Volterra equation, in economic, demographic and social sciences. It was found that these models can describe some complex behavioral phenomena such as marital behavior, the stable marriage problem and other demographic processes, possessing chaotic dynamics under certain conditions. However, the introduction of external factors directly into the continuous system can influence its dynamic properties and requires a reformulation of the whole model. Nowadays most of the simulations are performed on digital computers. Thus, it is possible to use special numerical techniques and discrete effects to introduce additional features to the digital models of continuous systems. In this paper we propose a discrete model with controllable phase-space volume based on the competitive Lotka–Volterra equations. This model is obtained through the application of semi-implicit numerical methods with controllable symmetry to the continuous competitive Lotka–Volterra model. The proposed model provides almost linear control of the phase-space volume and, consequently, the quantitative characteristics of simulated behavior, by shifting the symmetry of the underlying finite-difference scheme. We explicitly show the possibility of introducing almost arbitrary law to control the phase-space volume and entropy of the system. The proposed approach is verified through bifurcation, time domain and phase-space volume analysis. Several possible applications of the developed model to the social and demographic problems’ simulation are discussed. The developed discrete model can be broadly used in modern behavioral, demographic and social studies.

Highlights

  • Population dynamics, being the branch of science that studies the size and age composition of populations as dynamic systems [1], has been and continues to be a dominant branch of mathematical biology

  • The competitive Lotka–Volterra system is based on the logistic population model, and Ki represents the carrying capacity of species i

  • We investigate the CD CSCLV model of order 4, which can be written as following a finite-difference scheme based on Equations (6) and (7): x [ 1 ] n+1 = −

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Summary

Introduction

Population dynamics, being the branch of science that studies the size and age composition of populations as dynamic systems [1], has been and continues to be a dominant branch of mathematical biology. Several models have been proposed and formulated to study population dynamics. We focus on the family of dynamic systems developed by Alfred J. Lotka and Vito Volterra, usually referred to as the Lotka–Volterra models (LVM). Lotka in 1910 when developing the theory of autocatalytic chemical reactions, it was extended in 1920 to organic systems [2,3]. The same set of equations was independently developed by V. Volterra in 1926 [4]

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