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Quantitative Elements of General Biology Ivan Maly

Quantitative Elements of General Biology By Ivan Maly

Quantitative Elements of General Biology by Ivan Maly


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Quantitative Elements of General Biology Summary

Quantitative Elements of General Biology: A Dynamical Systems Approach by Ivan Maly

This monograph sketches out a broad spectrum of problems (from evolution and metabolism to morphogenesis and biogeographical dynamics) whose solution has been impacted by mathematical models. Each of the selected examples has led to the recognitionand set direction to further studyof certain fundamental but unintuitive properties of biological systems, such as the making and breaking of specific symmetries that underlie morphogenesis. Whether they are long-established or only recently accepted, these models are selected for being thought-provoking and illuminating both the achievements and the gaps in our current understanding of the given area of biology. The selection of models is also meant to bring to the fore the existing degree of unity in the quantitative approach to diverse general-biological questions and in the systems-level properties that are discovered across the levels of biological organization. It is the thesis of this book that further cultivation of such unity is a way forward as we progress toward a general theory of living matter.

This is an ideal book for students (in the broadest sense) of biology who wish to learn from this attempt to present the exemplary models, their methodological lessons, and the outline of a unified theory of living matter that is now beginning to emerge. In addition to a doctoral student preparing for quantitative biology research, this reader could also be an interdisciplinary scientist transitioning to biology. The latterfor example, a physicist or an engineermay be comfortable with the mathematical apparatus and prepared to quickly enter the intended area of work, but desires a broader foundation in biology from the quantitative perspective.

About Ivan Maly

Ivan Maly earned his PhD in the Life Sciences from Northwestern University. After a research stint in the Biological Engineering Division at MIT, he became a founding member of the Department of Computational and Systems Biology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Now at the State University of New York, he continues his experimental and computational cell-biological research while maintaining a broad interest in quantitative biology and problems of knowledge integration. His earlier books are Systems Biology (Springer, 2009) and Systems Biomechanics of the Cell (Springer, 2013).

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction

1.1. Subject of general biology

1.2. Goals of the quantitative approach

1.3. Physical-chemical basis of life

Chapter 2. Darwinian dynamics

2.1. Quasi-species theory

2.2. Natural selection in subcellular dynamics

Chapter 3. Homeostasis

3.1. Control processes

3.2. Regime-switch models

Chapter 4. Cellular organization

4.1. Self-centering

4.2. Symmetry-breaking

4.3. Emergent mechanical irreversibility

4.4. Dissipative oscillations

Chapter 5. Multicellular form and movement

5.1. Symmetry: folds and axes

5.2. Spaced foci and segmentation

5.3. Waves and cyclic motion

Chapter 6. Inter-species and planetary-scale dynamics

6.1. Stability and instability in population models

6.2. Steady states and cycles of interacting populations

6.3. Generational models and chaos

6.4. Dynamics of spatial interaction patterns


Additional information

NPB9783030791483
9783030791483
B0B8H1BXJL
Quantitative Elements of General Biology: A Dynamical Systems Approach by Ivan Maly
New
Paperback
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
2022-08-30
200
N/A
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