Modeling and Control in Biomedical Systems
Symposium Proceedings
Pergamon (Publisher)
Published on 28. February 1989
Book
Hardback
686 pages
978-0-08-035732-4 (ISBN)
Description
This volume provides a complete and up-to-date review of the recent developments and trends relating to modelling and control in biomedical systems in research, diagnosis and therapy. Focus is placed on methodological issues relevant to modelling and control as well as to the various physiological systems of the organism visited from a control viewpoint. Contains 98 papers.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Amsterdam
Netherlands
Publishing group
Elsevier Science & Technology
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
410ill.
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-08-035732-4 (9780080357324)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
(partial) Plenary lectures: Biomodel formulation and identification using optimal and other effective experiment designs, J J DiStefano III. Closed loop control of physiological variables, P G Katona. The role of models in metabolic research: a physiological perspective, R R Wolfe et al. Compartmental modelling, J A Jaquez. The role of nonlinear models in neurophysiological systems analysis, V Z Marmarelis. Artificial intelligence: a new approach to modeling and control, B J Kuipers. Identification and experiment design: Estimation approaches for modeling sparse data systems, D Z D'Argenio & D C Manev;l. Qualitative and quantitative experiment design for nonlinear models, E Walter & L Pronato; Parameter estimation versus system structure, B Bona et al. Unidentifiable systems: an approach to structural parameter bounds, L D'Angio & S Audoly.; Issues on the robust design of experiments for the estimation of nonlinear parameters, L Endrenyi et al. The future role of mathematical models in medicine: a case study, R L Flood & E R Carso;. A mathematical model for time-varying pharmacokinetics, K R Godfrey. Parameter bounding for classification of drug responses, J P Norton & S H Mo. ; more direct approach to compartmental modelling, J Rosenblatt. Optimal sampling schedule design may reveal inadequacy of model structure: a case study on the minimal model of glucose disappearance, A Ruggeri & C Cobelli; Optimized improvement of convergency in least squares parameter estimation of biomedical models, A Sano. A kinetic approach to hierarchical organization in biomedical systems, J P Sutton et al. 1800 lit. refs. approx., 410 illus.