meetrines
Meetrines are a hypothetical class of signaling agents proposed in theoretical models of distributed sensing and metrology networks. In these models, meetrines are molecules or signal carriers that diffuse through a medium, creating concentration gradients that encode spatial or temporal information. The concept is used to explore how autonomous nodes could coordinate calibration, timing, and synchronization without centralized control. It is not an established chemical family; no experimental consensus supports their real-world existence.
A node experiencing an event releases meetrine at a rate proportional to event strength. Other nodes sense
Key design parameters include diffusion coefficient, degradation rate, receptor specificity, and susceptibility to background signals. Theoretical
Meetrines emerged in discussions of distributed metrology and bio-inspired sensing during the late 20th and early
See also quorum sensing, morphogens, diffusive signaling, metrology, distributed sensing, swarm robotics.