Fr. 135.00

Network: From Biology to Theory

English · Hardback

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Description

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After over a century of research, we still do not understand the principle by which a stimulus, such as an odour or a sound, is represented by distributed neural ensembles within the brain; by which an individual is developed by the control of gene networks. While past studies have made detailed analysis of response profiles of single cells and the properties of a single gene in isolation, such techniques and approaches cannot easily address holistic issues of how large ensembles of neurons and genes can integrate information both spatially and temporally. There is little doubt that much of the info processing power of the brain or a gene network resides in the activities of co-operating and competing networks of neurons and genes and that if we unlock the principles whereby info is encoded and processed within these networks as a whole, rather than within single neurones or genes in isolation, we may be able to understand how the brain or gene network works. Our book will contribute to the development of such a study.

List of contents

Theory.- The Category of X-Nets.- Networks with Delays.- Dynamical Networks.- Applications in Neuroscience.- Neuronal Computation Using High-Order Statistics.- Neuronal Model of Decision Making.- Estimation of Spike Train Statistics in Spontaneously Active Biological Neural Networks.- Physiology and Related Models of Associative Visual Processing.- Gestalt Formation in a Competitive Layered Neural Architecture.- Applications in Bioinformatics.- Regulatory Signals in Genomic Sequences.- Dynamic Properties of Cell-Cycle and Life-Cycle Networks in Budding Yeast.- Understanding Protein-Protein Interactions: From Domain Level to Motif Level.- An Efficient Algorithm for Deciphering Regulatory Motifs.- The Stochastic Model and Metastability of the Gene Network.- Messenger RNA Information: Its Implication in Protein Structure Determination and Others.

About the author

Many invited speakers are quite senior people in the area. For example, Prof. Ritter and Prof. Jost won the Lebnitz Prize in Germany, which is the highest prize in Germany. There are many senior people from China as well and the invited speakers are from Qinhua, Peking, Fudan etc. University, covering almost all leading universities in China. Prof. Zhang, from Cold Spring USA (arguably the best institute in biology in the world), is the leading biologist working in the area.

Summary

After over a century of research, we still do not understand the principle by which a stimulus, such as an odour or a sound, is represented by distributed neural ensembles within the brain; by which an individual is developed by the control of gene networks. While past studies have made detailed analysis of response profiles of single cells and the properties of a single gene in isolation, such techniques and approaches cannot easily address holistic issues of how large ensembles of neurons and genes can integrate information both spatially and temporally. There is little doubt that much of the info processing power of the brain or a gene network resides in the activities of co-operating and competing networks of neurons and genes and that if we unlock the principles whereby info is encoded and processed within these networks as a whole, rather than within single neurones or genes in isolation, we may be able to understand how the brain or gene network works. Our book will contribute to the development of such a study.

Product details

Assisted by Jianfeng Feng (Editor), Jiang Feng (Editor), Jürge Jost (Editor), Jurgen Jost (Editor), Jürgen Jost (Editor), Qian Minping (Editor), Minping Qian (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2007
 
EAN 9781846284854
ISBN 978-1-84628-485-4
No. of pages 318
Dimensions 155 mm x 21 mm x 243 mm
Illustrations XXVI, 318 p. 89 illus.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > Data communication, networks

Simulation, Protein, B, Statistics, PHYSIOLOGY, DV-gestützte Biologie/Bioinformatik, computer science, Patterns, molecular biology, bioinformatics, Life sciences: general issues, Computer Communication Networks, Information technology: general issues, Computational and Systems Biology, Computational Biology/Bioinformatics, Computer communication systems

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