Biology is witnessing a transformation towards a more quantitative science, based on the major technological breakthroughs of the past decade. In this transformation, biology is incorporating mathematical modeling techniques and computational approaches towards numerical simulations, model analysis, and quantitativepredictions.An importantgoalis to formalizeandanalyzethe ev- changing inter-connections between components (often on di?erent time and space scales), their in?uence on one another, regulatory patterns, alternative pathways, etc. Formal reasoning rather than empirical observations is the main driving force in this new type of biological research.At the same time, computer science and applied mathematics are faced with considerable methodological challenges in handling an unprecedented level of concurrency, stochastic e?ects, amixoflargeandsmallpopulations,combinatorialexplosionsinthe statespace, model re?nement, and model (de)composition, etc. ThisspecialissueofTransactionsonComputationalSystemsBiologyonC- putationalModels forCellProcessesisbasedonaworkshopwith thesamename that took place in Turku, Finland, on May 27, 2008.
The workshop was or- nized as a satellite event of the 15th International Symposium on Formal Me- ods that took place in Turku in the period May 28-31, 2008. This special issue however had an open call for paper submissions, with a separate peer-review process. The accepted papers span an interesting mix of approaches to systems biology, ranging from quantitative to qualitative techniques, from continuous to discrete mathematics, from deterministic to stochastic methods, from compu- tional models for biology to computing paradigms inspired by biology. Overall, they give a good glimpse into some of the exciting current research avenues in computational systems biology.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
From the reviews:
"It is a multidisciplinary collection of research papers, by researchers, for researchers. The papers target specialists in particular formalisms. . papers were presented at a satellite workshop of the 15th International Symposium on Formal Methods at Turku, in 2008. The goal of the research is to supplement 'wetlab' science (in vitro or in vivo) by in silico or in numero studies. . In conclusion, this book is for specialists . ." (Richard Botting, ACM Computing Reviews, November, 2010)
Reihe
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für Beruf und Forschung
Research
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 23.5 cm
Breite: 15.5 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-3-642-04185-3 (9783642041853)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-04186-0
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Herausgeber*in
Freier Redakteuer; freier Lektor
Computational Models for Cell Processes.- Process Algebra Modelling Styles for Biomolecular Processes.- Simple, Enhanced and Mutual Mobile Membranes.- Bio-PEPA with Events.- In Silico Modelling and Analysis of Ribosome Kinetics and aa-tRNA Competition.- Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of a Bio-PEPA Model of the Gp130/JAK/STAT Signalling Pathway.- Rule-Based Modelling and Model Perturbation.- Extended Stochastic Petri Nets for Model-Based Design of Wetlab Experiments.- A Projective Brane Calculus with Activate, Bud and Mate as Primitive Actions.- Accepting Networks of Non-inserting Evolutionary Processors.- Discrete Modeling of Biochemical Signaling with Memory Enhancement.- Dynamical Systems and Stochastic Programming: To Ordinary Differential Equations and Back.- Computing Equilibrium Points of Genetic Regulatory Networks.- Code, Context, and Epigenetic Catalysis in Gene Expression.