Fr. 180.00

Evolutionary Dynamics and Information Hierarchies in Biological System

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor Douglas Braaten is the editor of Evolutionary Dynamics and Information Hierarchies in Biological Systems, published by Wiley. Klappentext Evolutionary Dynamics and Information Hierarchies in Biological Systems: Aspen Center for Physics Workshop. Organisms use a variety of mechanisms to store, interpret, and use information that is organized in a large and complex hierarchy from DNA sequences, to chromatin regulation, to intra/extracellular signaling, to tissue/organ organization, to the interactions between organisms and species. This Annals volume presents individual papers and a summarizing meeting report stemming from a workshop at the Aspen Center for Physics in Aspen, Colorado, organized to discuss these issues. The three themed weeks of the workshop focused on the organization of DNA into chromatin, epigenetic adaptation and host/pathogen interaction, and macroevolution. Although these areas represent a wide breadth of biological phenomena, several unifying themes emerged through workshop discussions. In particular, the differences between the simplicity of our theoretical models and the complex interactions characteristic of real physical systems were repeatedly highlighted. Workshop discussions therefore pointed to key areas where theory and observations should aim to converge as we refine our understanding of evolution. Inhaltsverzeichnis Evolutionary dynamics and information hierarchies in biological systems: Aspen Center for Physics Workshop Evolutionary dynamics and information hierarchies in biological systems In Darwinian evolution, feedback from natural selection leads to biased mutations Establishing epigenetic domains via chromatin-bound histone modifiers The molecular basis for the development of neural maps Cracking the neural code: third annual Aspen Brain Forum In vivo robotics: the automation of neuroscience and other intact-system biological fields Vision: are models of object recognition catching up with the brain? Long-range connectomics ...

Product details

Authors BRAATEN, Douglas Braaten, . Nyas
Assisted by BRAATEN (Editor), Douglas Braaten (Editor), Braaten Douglas (Editor)
Publisher New york academy of sciences
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 18.03.2014
 
EAN 9781573319065
ISBN 978-1-57331-906-5
No. of pages 96
Series Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Annals of the New York Academy
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Annals of the New York Academy
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > General, dictionaries

SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Evolution, Biology, life sciences

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