Information processing and living systems /
Information processing and information flow occur in the course of an organism's development and throughout its lifespan. Organisms do not exist in isolation, but interact with each other constantly within a complex ecosystem. The relationships between organisms, such as those between prey or p...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London : Singapore ; Hackensack, NJ :
Imperial College Press ; Distributed by World Scientific Pub.,
©2005.
|
Colección: | Series on advances in bioinformatics and computational biology ;
v. 2. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Preface
- Overview of the Book
- Why are we putting these two domains together?
- Contents
- CHAPTER 1 A MULTI-DISCIPLINARY SURVEY OF BIOCOMPUTING: 1. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR LEVELS*
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Lock-Key Paradigm versus Switch-Based Processing
- 3. Absolute versus Relative Determinism
- 4. Nested Hierarchy of Biocomputing Dynamics
- 5. Membrane as a Mesoscopic Substrate
- 5.1. Localized and delocalized potentials in biomembranes
- 5.2. Role of membrane fluidity in the mesoscopic dynamics
- 5.3. Electrostatic interactions as a molecular switching mechanism
- 5.4. Lateral mobility of protons on membrane surfaces: the 8220;Pacific Ocean effect
- 5.5. Role and specificity of phospholipid polar head-groups
- 5.6. Effect of transmembrane diffusion potentials and compartmentalization
- 5.7. Vesicular transport, exocytosis and synaptic transmission
- 6. Shape-Based Molecular Recognition
- 6.1. Role of short-range non-covalent bond interactions in molecular recognition
- 6.2. Molecular recognition between ferredoxin and FNR
- 6.3. Comparison of plastocyanin and cytochrome c6
- 6.4. Molecular recognition of transducin and arrestin
- 6.5. Electronic-conformational interactions
- 7. Intracellular and Intramolecular Dynamics
- 7.1. Electrostatic interactions between a small molecule and a macromolecule
- 7.2. Effect of phosphorylation
- 7.3. Concept of intelligent materials
- 7.4. Concept of calcium-concentration microdomain
- 7.5. Errors, gradualism and evolution
- 7.6. Protein folding
- 8. Stochastic Nature of Neural Events: Controlled Randomness of Macroscopic Dynamics
- 9. Long-Term Potentiation and Synaptic Plasticity
- 10. Role of Dendrites in Information Processing
- 11. Efficiency of Biocomputing
- 12. General Discussion and Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- References
- CHAPTER 2 A MULTI-DISCIPLINARY SURVEY OF BIOCOMPUTING: 2. SYSTEMS AND EVOLUTIONARY LEVELS, AND TECHNOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS*
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 2.1. Key conclusions of Part 1
- 2.2. Element of non-equilibrium thermodynamics
- 2.3. Element of cellular automata
- 2.4. Element of nonlinear dynamic analysis
- 3. Biocomputing at the Evolutionary Level
- 3.1. Is evolution deterministic?
- 3.2. Explanatory power of evolution
- 3.3. Evolution as problem solving
- 3.4. Random search, exhaustive search and heuristic search
- 3.5. Enigma of homochirality of biomolecules
- 3.6. Damage control and opportunistic invention
- 3.7. Analogues and homologues
- 3.8. Co-evolution and perpetual novelty
- 3.9. Punctuated equilibrium and Cambrian explosion
- 4. Cognitive Aspects of Biocomputing
- 4.1. Models of creative problem solving
- 4.2. Parallel processing versus sequential processing in pattern recognition
- 4.3. Random search versus heuristic search
- 4.4. Dogmatism and self-imposed constraint
- 4.5. Retention phase: the need of sequential verification
- 4.6. Picture-based reasoning versus rule-based reasoning in pattern recognition
- 4.7. Advantages and disadvantages of rule-based reasoning
- 4.8. Contemporary interpretation of Freuds concept of the unconscious and Poincars introspective account
- 4.9. Interpretation of hypnagogia and serendipity
- 4.10. Gray scale of understanding and interpretation of intuition and 8220;aha experience
- 4.11. Pseudo-parallel processing
- 4.12. Need of conceptualiza.