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Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise

The importance of mathematics in the undergraduate biology curriculum is ever increasing, as is the importance of biology within the undergraduate applied mathematics curriculum. This ambitious forward thinking book  strives to make concrete  connections between the two fields at the undergraduate l...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Milton, John, Ohira, Toru
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-9096-8
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1952364
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author Milton, John
Ohira, Toru
author_facet Milton, John
Ohira, Toru
author_sort Milton, John
collection CERN
description The importance of mathematics in the undergraduate biology curriculum is ever increasing, as is the importance of biology within the undergraduate applied mathematics curriculum. This ambitious forward thinking book  strives to make concrete  connections between the two fields at the undergraduate level, bringing in a wide variety of mathematical  methods  such as  signal processing, systems identification, and stochastic differential equations to an undergraduate audience interested in biological dynamics. The presentation stresses a practical hands-on approach: important concepts are introduced using linear first- or second-order differential equations that can be solved using “pencil and paper”; next, these are extended to “real world” applications through the use of computer algorithms written in Scientific Python or similar software. This book developed from a course taught by Professor John Milton at the University of Chicago and developed and continued over many years with Professor Toru Ohira at the Claremont Colleges. The tone of the book is pedagogical, engaging, accessible, with lots of examples and exercises. The authors attempt to tread a line between accessibility of the text and mathematical exposition. Online laboratories are provided as a teaching aid.  At the beginning of each chapter a number of questions are posed to the reader, and then answered at the conclusion of the chapter.     Milton and Ohira’s book is aimed at an undergraduate audience, makes close ties to the laboratory, and includes a range of biological applications, favoring  physiology. This makes it a unique contribution to the literature. This book will be of interest to quantitatively inclined undergraduate biologists, biophysicists and bioengineers and in addition through its focus on techniques actually used by biologists, the authors hope this  text will help shape curricula in biomathematics education going forward. Review: "Based on the authors' experience teaching biology students, this book introduces a wide range of mathematical techniques in a lively and engaging style.  Examples drawn from the authors' experimental and neurological studies provide a rich source of material for computer laboratories that solidify the concepts.  The book will be an invaluable resource for biology students and scientists interested in practical applications of mathematics to analyze mechanisms of complex biological rhythms."  (Leon Glass, McGill University, 2013)
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spelling cern-19523642021-04-21T20:52:28Zdoi:10.1007/978-1-4614-9096-8http://cds.cern.ch/record/1952364engMilton, JohnOhira, ToruMathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noiseMathematical Physics and MathematicsThe importance of mathematics in the undergraduate biology curriculum is ever increasing, as is the importance of biology within the undergraduate applied mathematics curriculum. This ambitious forward thinking book  strives to make concrete  connections between the two fields at the undergraduate level, bringing in a wide variety of mathematical  methods  such as  signal processing, systems identification, and stochastic differential equations to an undergraduate audience interested in biological dynamics. The presentation stresses a practical hands-on approach: important concepts are introduced using linear first- or second-order differential equations that can be solved using “pencil and paper”; next, these are extended to “real world” applications through the use of computer algorithms written in Scientific Python or similar software. This book developed from a course taught by Professor John Milton at the University of Chicago and developed and continued over many years with Professor Toru Ohira at the Claremont Colleges. The tone of the book is pedagogical, engaging, accessible, with lots of examples and exercises. The authors attempt to tread a line between accessibility of the text and mathematical exposition. Online laboratories are provided as a teaching aid.  At the beginning of each chapter a number of questions are posed to the reader, and then answered at the conclusion of the chapter.     Milton and Ohira’s book is aimed at an undergraduate audience, makes close ties to the laboratory, and includes a range of biological applications, favoring  physiology. This makes it a unique contribution to the literature. This book will be of interest to quantitatively inclined undergraduate biologists, biophysicists and bioengineers and in addition through its focus on techniques actually used by biologists, the authors hope this  text will help shape curricula in biomathematics education going forward. Review: "Based on the authors' experience teaching biology students, this book introduces a wide range of mathematical techniques in a lively and engaging style.  Examples drawn from the authors' experimental and neurological studies provide a rich source of material for computer laboratories that solidify the concepts.  The book will be an invaluable resource for biology students and scientists interested in practical applications of mathematics to analyze mechanisms of complex biological rhythms."  (Leon Glass, McGill University, 2013)Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:19523642014
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Milton, John
Ohira, Toru
Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title_full Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title_fullStr Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title_full_unstemmed Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title_short Mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
title_sort mathematics as a laboratory tool: dynamics, delays and noise
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-9096-8
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1952364
work_keys_str_mv AT miltonjohn mathematicsasalaboratorytooldynamicsdelaysandnoise
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