An autocatalytic model describes a special type of reaction in which one of the reaction products also acts as a catalyst for the same reaction. This means that as the reaction proceeds, the amount of catalyst increases, thereby accelerating the reaction rate. This mechanism can occur in a single chemical reaction or within a "collectively autocatalytic" system composed of multiple interconnected reactions. In collective autocatalysis, the products of a set of reactions catalyze enough other reactions such that the entire system can sustain itself given a continuous supply of energy and raw materials. A hallmark feature of autocatalytic reactions is their S-shaped (or logistic) reaction rate curve: initially slow due to limited catalyst, followed by an accelerating phase as the catalyst accumulates, and finally a deceleration as reactant concentrations diminish. This S-shaped curve serves as a key indicator for identifying whether a reaction exhibits autocatalytic behavior.