Population pulsation
From JongBhak.com
Pulsation Network theory for population and species formation
by Jong Bhak
Population pulsation is a model of forming species and populations. It means that species or populations are formed through pulsation of individual dispersion in an interaction network of populations and inviduals.
Every population has a pulsation process where they send genes to other nodes. When certain population and species are isolated, the pulsation links among populations become weak. This makes a sub populations of genetic stocks.
The consequence of this is that a species as we know are not such an important concept. It is just one of many layers of biological entities. A species is a network of inviduals and populations. The individuals and populations are always linked to other populations and species forming constantly changing genetic pools.
In this regards, humans are not necessarily out of Africa or one location. Africans have been there as a populations nodes. Asians have been in Asia as population nodes. They interacted constantly for millions of years. A migration can be described as a pulse event of a population which is a continuous activity of any species. Populations can exchange genes in many ways. Even different species can move gene information to other species through vectors such as viruses.
We are the product of "out of everywhere".
Migration is a term that describes a pulsation event which has a strong direction. If a population sends strong directed signals to another population(s), we define it as a migration.
Population pulsation process is severly affected by geography. Geographical barriers can make the migration edges long in the pulsation network.
Pulsation network is a simulation protocol to study human migration bioinformatically.