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Fractals in Biology and Medicine [electronic resource] /edited by Gabriele A. Losa, Danilo Merlini, Theo F. Nonnenmacher, Ewald R. Weibel.

by Losa, Gabriele A [editor.]; Merlini, Danilo [editor.]; Nonnenmacher, Theo F [editor.]; Weibel, Ewald R [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Mathematics and Biosciences in Interaction: Publisher: Basel : Birkhäuser Basel, 2005.Description: VII, 314p. online resource.ISBN: 9783764374129.Subject(s): Life sciences | Biology -- Data processing | Biology -- Mathematics | Life Sciences | Mathematical Biology in General | Life Sciences, general | Computer Appl. in Life SciencesDDC classification: 570.151 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Fractal Structures in Biological Systems -- Mandelbrot’s Fractals and the Geometry of Life: A Tribute to Benoît Mandelbrot on his 80th Birthday -- Gas Diffusion through the Fractal Landscape of the Lung: How Deep Does Oxygen Enter the Alveolar System? -- Is the Lung an Optimal Gas Exchanger? -- 3D Hydrodynamics in the Upper Human Bronchial Tree: Interplay between Geometry and Flow Distribution -- Fractal Aspects of Three-Dimensional Vascular Constructive Optimization -- Cognition Network Technology: Object Orientation and Fractal Topology in Biomedical Image Analysis. Method and Applications -- The Use of Fractal Analysis for the Quantification of Oocyte Cytoplasm Morphology -- Fractal Structures in Neurosciences -- Fractal Analysis: Pitfalls and Revelations in Neuroscience -- Ongoing Hippocampal Neuronal Activity in Human: Is it Noise or Correlated Fractal Process? -- Do Mental and Social Processes have a Self-similar Structure? The Hypothesis of Fractal Affect-Logic -- Scaling Properties of Cerebral Hemodynamics -- A Multifractal Dynamical Model of Human Gait -- Dual Antagonistic Autonomic Control Necessary for 1/f Scaling in Heart Rate -- Fractal Structures in Tumours and Diseases -- Tissue Architecture and Cell Morphology of Squamous Cell Carcinomas Compared to Granular Cell Tumours’ Pseudo-epitheliomatous Hyperplasia and to Normal Oral Mucosae -- Statistical Shape Analysis Applied to Automatic Recognition of Tumor Cells -- Fractal Analysis of Monolayer Cell Nuclei from Two Different Prognostic Classes of Early Ovarian Cancer -- Fractal Analysis of Vascular Network Pattern in Human Diseases -- Quantification of Local Architecture Changes Associated with Neoplastic Progression in Oral Epithelium using Graph Theory -- Fractal Analysis of Canine Trichoblastoma -- Fractal Dimension as a Novel Clinical Parameter in Evaluation of the Urodynamic Curves -- Nonlinear Dynamics in Uterine Contractions Analysis -- Computer-Aided Estimate and Modelling of the Geometrical Complexity of the Corneal Stroma -- The Fractal Paradigm -- Complex-Dynamical Extension of the Fractal Paradigm and its Applications in Life Sciences -- Fractal-like Features of Dinosaur Eggshells -- Evolution and Regulation of Metabolic Networks -- Cytoskeleton as a Fractal Percolation Cluster: Some Biological Remarks -- A Mystery of the Gompertz Function -- Fractional Calculus and Symbolic Solution of Fractional Differential Equations -- Fox-Function Representation of a Generalized Arrhenius Law and Applications.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This volume is number four in a series of proceedings volumes from the International Symposia on Fractals in Biology and Medicine in Ascona, Switzerland which have been inspired by the work of Benoît Mandelbrot seeking to extend the concepts towards the life sciences. It highlights the potential that fractal geometry offers for elucidating and explaining the complex make-up of cells, tissues and biological organisms either in normal or in pathological conditions, including the structural changes that occur in tumours. It helps develop the concepts, questions and methods required in research on fractal biology and natural phenomena and to evidence the pitfalls of a too simplistic application of these principles in investigating topical subjects of biology and medicine. It discusses present and future applications of fractal geometry, bringing together cellular and molecular biology, engineering, mathematics, physics, medicine and other disciplines and allowing an interdisciplinary vision. The book should be of interest to researchers and students from molecular and cell biology, biomedicine, biomathematics, analytical morphology, immunology and neurology who are interested in the combination of mathematics and life sciences.
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Fractal Structures in Biological Systems -- Mandelbrot’s Fractals and the Geometry of Life: A Tribute to Benoît Mandelbrot on his 80th Birthday -- Gas Diffusion through the Fractal Landscape of the Lung: How Deep Does Oxygen Enter the Alveolar System? -- Is the Lung an Optimal Gas Exchanger? -- 3D Hydrodynamics in the Upper Human Bronchial Tree: Interplay between Geometry and Flow Distribution -- Fractal Aspects of Three-Dimensional Vascular Constructive Optimization -- Cognition Network Technology: Object Orientation and Fractal Topology in Biomedical Image Analysis. Method and Applications -- The Use of Fractal Analysis for the Quantification of Oocyte Cytoplasm Morphology -- Fractal Structures in Neurosciences -- Fractal Analysis: Pitfalls and Revelations in Neuroscience -- Ongoing Hippocampal Neuronal Activity in Human: Is it Noise or Correlated Fractal Process? -- Do Mental and Social Processes have a Self-similar Structure? The Hypothesis of Fractal Affect-Logic -- Scaling Properties of Cerebral Hemodynamics -- A Multifractal Dynamical Model of Human Gait -- Dual Antagonistic Autonomic Control Necessary for 1/f Scaling in Heart Rate -- Fractal Structures in Tumours and Diseases -- Tissue Architecture and Cell Morphology of Squamous Cell Carcinomas Compared to Granular Cell Tumours’ Pseudo-epitheliomatous Hyperplasia and to Normal Oral Mucosae -- Statistical Shape Analysis Applied to Automatic Recognition of Tumor Cells -- Fractal Analysis of Monolayer Cell Nuclei from Two Different Prognostic Classes of Early Ovarian Cancer -- Fractal Analysis of Vascular Network Pattern in Human Diseases -- Quantification of Local Architecture Changes Associated with Neoplastic Progression in Oral Epithelium using Graph Theory -- Fractal Analysis of Canine Trichoblastoma -- Fractal Dimension as a Novel Clinical Parameter in Evaluation of the Urodynamic Curves -- Nonlinear Dynamics in Uterine Contractions Analysis -- Computer-Aided Estimate and Modelling of the Geometrical Complexity of the Corneal Stroma -- The Fractal Paradigm -- Complex-Dynamical Extension of the Fractal Paradigm and its Applications in Life Sciences -- Fractal-like Features of Dinosaur Eggshells -- Evolution and Regulation of Metabolic Networks -- Cytoskeleton as a Fractal Percolation Cluster: Some Biological Remarks -- A Mystery of the Gompertz Function -- Fractional Calculus and Symbolic Solution of Fractional Differential Equations -- Fox-Function Representation of a Generalized Arrhenius Law and Applications.

This volume is number four in a series of proceedings volumes from the International Symposia on Fractals in Biology and Medicine in Ascona, Switzerland which have been inspired by the work of Benoît Mandelbrot seeking to extend the concepts towards the life sciences. It highlights the potential that fractal geometry offers for elucidating and explaining the complex make-up of cells, tissues and biological organisms either in normal or in pathological conditions, including the structural changes that occur in tumours. It helps develop the concepts, questions and methods required in research on fractal biology and natural phenomena and to evidence the pitfalls of a too simplistic application of these principles in investigating topical subjects of biology and medicine. It discusses present and future applications of fractal geometry, bringing together cellular and molecular biology, engineering, mathematics, physics, medicine and other disciplines and allowing an interdisciplinary vision. The book should be of interest to researchers and students from molecular and cell biology, biomedicine, biomathematics, analytical morphology, immunology and neurology who are interested in the combination of mathematics and life sciences.

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