BIOMAT 2005
Author | : Rubem P. Mondaini |
Publisher | : World Scientific |
Total Pages | : 410 |
Release | : 2006 |
ISBN-10 | : 9789812773685 |
ISBN-13 | : 9812773681 |
Rating | : 4/5 (85 Downloads) |
Book excerpt: This volume contains the contributions of the keynote speakers to the BIOMAT 2005 symposium, as well as a collection of selected papers by pioneering researchers. It provides a comprehensive review of the mathematical modeling of cancer development, Alzheimer''s disease, malaria, and aneurysm development. Various models for the immune system and epidemiological issues are analyzed and reviewed. The book also explores protein structure prediction by optimization and combinatorial techniques (Steiner trees). The coverage includes bioinformatics issues, regulation of gene expression, evolution, development, DNA and array modeling, and small world networks. Sample Chapter(s). Chapter 1: Modelling Aspects of Vascular Cancer Development (581 KB). Contents: Biological Modeling: A Mathematical Analysis of Cylindrical Shaped Aneurysms (T A Kwembe & S N Jones); On the Origin of Metazoans (F W Cummings); Optimal Control of Distributed Systems Applied to the Problems of Ambient Pollution (S F Arantes & J E M Rivera); Epidemiology and Immunology: Modeling the in Vivo Dynamics of Viral Infections (R M Ribeiro); The Basic Reproductive Rate in the Malaria Model (A P Wyse et al.); Epidemiological Model with Fast Dispersion (M R Ricard et al.); Protein Structure: Structure Prediction of Alpha-Helical Proteins (S R McAllister & C A Floudas); Steiner Minimal Trees, Twist Angles, and the Protein Folding Problem (J M Smith); Steiner Trees as Intramolecular Networks of the Biomacromolecular Structures (R P Mondaini); Bioinformatics: Optimization of Between Group Analysis of Gene Expression Disease Class Prediction (F Baty et al.); On Biclustering with Features Selection for Microarray Data Sets (P M Pardalos et al.); Simple and Effective Classifiers to Model Biological Data (R L Salvini et al.); and other papers. Readership: Graduate students and researchers in biology, mathematics and physics."