Agentic LLM Framework for Adaptive Decision Discourse

arXiv:2502.10978v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Effective decision-making in complex systems requires synthesizing diverse perspectives to address multifaceted challenges under uncertainty. This study introduces an agentic

arXiv:2603.06819v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Obesity does not emerge abruptly; rather, it develops gradually over extended periods. The gradual progression often prevents early recognition of physiological changes until excess adiposity is established. A common belief is that weight reduction can be achieved simply by “eating less and moving more”. Although reductions in caloric intake and increases in physical activity are fundamental principles of weight management, this perspective oversimplifies a complex and adaptive biological system. Metabolic rate, hormonal regulation, behavioral factors, and compensatory physiological responses all influence the body’s resistance to changes in weight. During weight loss, reduced metabolic rate and increased efficiency make maintaining a caloric deficit increasingly difficult. Conversely, during periods of overfeeding, resting metabolic rate, the thermic effect of food, and non-exercise activity thermogenesis increase with rising body weight, partially offsetting the caloric surplus and slowing weight gain. However, these compensatory responses are asymmetrical, with stronger and more persistent adaptations to underfeeding than to overfeeding. This asymmetry helps explain why weight gain often occurs gradually and why sustained weight loss is biologically challenging. In this work, we employ a lambda-omega model from dynamical systems theory to describe metabolic regulation in response to lifestyle perturbations. We introduce time-varying parameters that allow the regulatory coefficients to evolve gradually under sustained environmental and physiological stressors. By allowing lambda(t) and omega(t) to vary over time, the model captures progressive shifts in the metabolic set-point and deformation of the underlying dynamical landscape. This framework enables exploration of transitions between metabolic states and long-term adaptations that shape trajectories of weight gain and loss.

Subscribe for Updates

Copyright 2025 dijee Intelligence Ltd.   dijee Intelligence Ltd. is a private limited company registered in England and Wales at Media House, Sopers Road, Cuffley, Hertfordshire, EN6 4RY, UK registration number 16808844