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  • 1
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 49-54 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract In the theory of organismic sets (Bull. Math. Biophysics,31, 159–198, 1969) we considered organisms as sets endowed with certain “activities,” the latter’s resulting in a set of “products.” Those products may be of a material nature, like a hormone secreted by a cell, or of a non-material nature, like a feeling or an attitude. In the present paper aggressiveness and submissiveness are considered as such non-material products of the activities of the brain cells. A general description of aggressiveness and submissiveness is given in terms of organismic sets. Cycles in “peck order” are thus naturally explained.
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  • 2
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 55-66 
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    Notes: Abstract In line with previous studies on organismic sets, the division of all organismic sets intogeneral autotrophic and heterotrophic is introduced. The first produce their food themselves from some external source of energy, which in general may be an energy of any kind. The others use other organismic sets as the source of their food and energy. On earth we know only one kind of generalgeneral autotrophic organismic sets, namely, the autotrophic plants which use solar radiation as their source of energy and for production of their own food. It is shown why autotrophic animals do not exist on earth except as microorganisms like, e.g.,Euglena. A rigorous proof of the previously derived theorem that in an organismic set of ordern〉1 no element can be completely specialized is given. It requires the introduction of new postulates. Finally, in considering the organic world as a whole, the notion of organismic sets ofmixed order is introduced.
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  • 3
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 67-81 
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    Notes: Abstract It appears to be axiomatic that termolecular and higher order reactions occur relatively rarely. The basis for this judgment seems to lie in the supposition that successful 3-Body collisions of 3 interactive species of molecules cannot occur frequently enought to account for chemical or biochemical transformation. In order to provide a more complete mathematical framework than now exists for examining this hypothesis the probability of effective termolecular “δ-collisions” as a function of time is derived. This amounts to adding to the class of reactions for which stochastic models are now available the termolecular reaction. In common with the unimolecular and bimolecular cases this process is seen to satisfy the criterion of consistency-in-the-mean with respect to deterministic formulations. It is planned next to use the termolecular process and the lower order processes in computer-assistedin numero experimental studies aimed at comparing alternative mechanisms of reaction.
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  • 4
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 83-96 
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    Notes: Abstract Small sample properties of the maximum likelihood estimator for the rate constant of a stochastic first order reaction are investigated. The approximate bias and variance of the maximum likelihood estimator are derived and tabulated. If observations of the system are made at timesiτ,i=1, 2, ...,N; τ〉0, the observational spacing τ which minimizes the approximate variance of the maximum likelihood estimator is found. The non-applicability of large sample theory to confidence interval derivation is demonstrated by examination of the relative likelihood. Bartlett’s method is employed to derive approximate confidence limits, and is illustrated by using simulated kinetic runs.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 339-354 
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    Notes: Abstract The representation of biological systems by means of organismic supercategories, developed in previous papers (Bull. Math. Biophysics,30, 625–636;31, 59–71;32, 539–561), is further discussed. The different approaches to relational biology, developed by Rashevsky, Rosen and by Băianu and Marinescu, are compared with Qualitative Dynamics of Systems which was initiated by Henri Poincaré (1881). On the basis of this comparison some concrete result concerning dynamics of genetic system, development, fertilization, regeneration, analogies, and oncogenesis are derived.
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  • 6
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 303-319 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract Some years ago (Rosen 1958a, b; 1959) we described a class of metaphorical, relational paradigms for cellular activity which we termed (M, R)-systems. A sizable amount of subsequent work, to be itemized below, has been devoted to an exploration of some of the properties of these systems. The main purpose of the present paper is to put this class of paradigms into a general system-theoretic perspective, with a particular view to appraising the relation between the type of system description embodied in the (M, R)-system and other kinds of physical and mathematical descriptions of cellular systems. Thus, the principal aim is to establish the relationships and connections between the global relational formalism embodied in the (M, R)-systems and the empirical descriptions which still represent the bulk of our biological knowledge.
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  • 7
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 321-338 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract After giving a brief review of the theory of organismic sets (Bull. Math. Biophysics,29, 139–152, 1967;31, 159–198, 1969), in which the concept of relational forces, introduced earlier (Bull. Math. Biophysics,28, 283–308, 1966a) plays a fundamental role, the author discusses examples of possible different structures produced by relational forces. For biological organisms the different structures found theoretically are in general agreement with observation. For societies, which are also organismic sets as discussed in the above references, the structures can be described only in an abstract space, the nature of which is discussed. Different isomorphisms between anatomical structures, as described in ordinary Euclidean space, and the sociological structures described in an abstract space are noted, as should be expected from the theory of organismic sets.
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  • 8
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    Notes: Abstract Current psychological research into the inference (diagnostic) process is briefly reviewed, using as a vehicle an investigation of the prediction of the probability of success of hypothetical applicants to a graduate program in biology. Brunswik’s lens model and multiple regression analysis are used, as is a Bayesian approach. Four judges’ (biologists’) predictions are analyzed. Some general conclusions about inference, drawn from the current data in psychology, are presented.
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  • 9
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 451-462 
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    Notes: Abstract A mathematical model has been developed to simulate the glucose-insulin interaction following a glucose load such as occurs in an IVGTT. This model differs from earlier models in that the insulin response to glucose loading is a recurring all or none threshold response. The model has been simulated on a digital computer using the digital analog simulation language CSMP.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 463-479 
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    Notes: Abstract The composite nature of bone dictates the use of a model for bone which is transversely isotropic. We solve the associated sets of partial differential equations governing the dynamic elastic behavoor of a two-layered cylindrical-shaped bone. The solution is analyzed for long, short, and intermediate length waves. The special case of compact bone is treated for long and short wave lengths and a numerical example is worked out to determine the wave speeds (for short wave lengths) given a set of elastic constants, determined by ultrasonic methods, and the bone density, wave frequency, and radius.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 481-481 
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  • 12
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 967-969 
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    Notes: Abstract It is observed that a dynamical continuity equation for biomass distribution yields the asymptotic steady-state exponential dependencen=A exp( $$ - m/\bar m$$ ) exhibited by certain fishery data, wherem is the biomass of an individual,n is the number of individuals per unit biomass interval, andA, $$\bar m$$ are positive constants. This dynamical approach to biomass distribution is an alternative to the global maximization principle proposed recently by Lurié and Wagensberg.
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  • 13
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 971-972 
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  • 14
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 973-974 
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  • 15
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 1-16 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract A vast number of biologically important processes are based upon bimolecular systems. In these systems intermediate complexes are formed. Bimolecular systems in which no complex-complex interactions occur are called linear systems of complexes. A definition and some characteristic properties of these systems are given here. There may exist a contradiction of Onsager's principle of detailed balancing in these systems; however, no principal differences are found between the steady state behavior of an open system and that of a closed system. It is shown that the steady state behavior of a linear system of complexes of arbitrary complexity has some similarities with the steady state behavior of a simple bimolecular system, e.g., Michaelis-Menten enzymatic reaction. Multiplicity of action of the substances participating in biomolecular processes may produce some qualitative differences in the steady state behavior of the system.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 17-32 
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    Notes: Abstract A time-dependent DNA histogram is calculated for an irradiated population of cells under the limiting assumption that the cells cannot pass through prophase due to the effects of the radiation. The population is assumed to increase exponentially prior to irradiation, but after irradiation to neither gain nor lose cells. Chromosome-number dispersion is taken into account in the calculation. The qualitative behavior of the calculated and experimental histograms are in reasonable agreement. The quantitative agreement between the two is relatively good at short post-irradiation times but is poor at long post-irradiation times (say, greater than half the doubling time). This suggests that recovery phenomena cannot be neglected at long post-irradiation times.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 187-188 
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    Notes: Abstract It is pointed out that the three different stimuli for a corrective turn, namely the distance from the edge of the lane, the rate of approach to the edge, and the angle between the direction of the car and the direction of the lane (Bull. Math. Biophysics,28, 645–654, 1966,29, 181–186, 1967) may act all three simultaneously. It is found that in that case the tracking curve of the car is stable below a critical speed and becomes unstable above it.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 181-186 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract Continuing a previous study (Bull. Math. Biophysics, 28, 645–654, 1966), the biophysical mechanism of a corrective turn is investigated for the case where the stimulus for the corrective turn is produced not only by the perception of the nearness of an edge of the lane, but also by the rate of approach of the car towards the edge. In that case it is found that the tracking curve of the car may consist of a series of damped sinusoids and safe driving would be possible at any speed if it were not for the endogenous fluctuation in the driver's central nervous system. If the effect of the rate of approach increases sufficiently rapidly as the distance to the edge of the lane decreases, then a stable undamped oscillating tracking curve is possible. The case is also studied where the driver makes a corrective turn in response to a direct perception of the angle between the direction of the lane and the longitudinal axis of the car.
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  • 19
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 245-259 
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    Notes: Abstract The principle of minimal work requires that the conducting airways of the human lung should have a maximum radius for minimal resistance to gas flow. At the same time there is a requirement that the airways should have a minimal volume for economy of space. These two opposing requirements have been investigated mathematically, and a method for calculating the angle of branching which produces minimal volume has been derived. The relationship of the radii of the parent and daughter branches to produce minimal resistance has been similarly defined. By measurement of a bronchial cast from a human lung the extent to which the predicted optimum structure is realized in practice has been shown. The change in structure associated with change of function at the transition from conducting airway to diffusion zone has been demonstrated.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 191-206 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper considers a class of set-theoretical entities, calledn-rank Linnaean structures, which are intended as abstract models of the taxonomic classificatory systems of biology. In the first part, devoted to formalism, finite Linnaean structures are discussed in complete generality; but, in addition, eight distinct subclasses are noted and some of the properties of their elements are explored. In the second part, concerned with applications, it is shown that taxonomic systems may be recast in the form of finite Linnaean structures, and an effort is made to show that some undesirable features of earlier models are avoided without artificiality and without abandoning extensional mathematics.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 207-216 
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    Notes: Abstract Generalizing an idea of M. Richardson (Fundamentals of Mathematics, New York: Macmillan Co., 1958), an APS on a given populationP is a non-empty collection of non-empty subsets ofP such that ifA is in the collection andA⊆B, thenB is in the collection. From a structure of this kind a partial ordering ofP, called therelated bumping order, is derived. The question is raised as to what kinds of partial orderings can be so obtained. For structures determined by voting weights of the members of the population, a complete characterization of all possible bumping orders is obtained.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 217-226 
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    Notes: Abstract The “second method” of Liapunov is used to perform a stability analysis of a mathematical model of the neuron. This analysis is based on the hypothesis that the firing of the neuron coincides with a temporary state of instability of the system, and that the initiation of all-or-none process depends on the magnitude of membrane depolarization and its first time derivative. It is found that the stability (and hence the possibility of a second firing) is restored approximately when the rate of membrane repolarization is at a maximum. This result predicts that the duration of the period of absolute refractoriness in neurons would be about 75 per cent of the spike duration, and thus shorter than the value usually obtained from experimental measurements.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 227-232 
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    Notes: Abstract Some aspects of masking phenomena are considered in terms of the simplest possible model of two-factor neural elements. The effect of a number of variables can be accounted for, but the introduction of an internuncial element results in a masking function which need not be symmetric about zero delay interval. As an illustration, the results for a special case are compared with available data. In general, such a model results in a masking function which depends on the intensity, area, and duration of the stimuli, as well as on the temporal and spatial separation between them.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 377-388 
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    Notes: Abstract The general equations are discussed describing two species in competition or in symbiosis or feeding one on the other.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 403-404 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 389-393 
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    Notes: Abstract It is shown that the principle of biological epimorphism (Rashevsky,Mathematical Principles in Biology and Their Applications, Springfield, Ill.: Charles Thomas, 1960) is contained in the theory of organismic sets (Bull. Math. Biophysics,29, 139–152, 1967) if an additional postulate not directly connected to mappings is made.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 407-407 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 409-409 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 605-613 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper deals with bimolecular systems in which also complex-complex interactions occur. Because of the complexity of the problem, an approximation in a form of coupled linear systems of complexes (Bull. Math. Biophysics,29, 1–16, 1967) is considered. Two types of couplings, serial and parallel, are studied. In the serial coupling the nonlinear system of complexes has the same behavior as its subsystems. An entity, initial sensitivity, has interesting properties: in serial coupling it is at most equal to the product and in parallel coupling, at most equal to the sum of partial initial sensitivities.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 615-623 
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    Notes: Abstract Amplification effect in the catalytic bimolecular systems is a consequence of the kinetic characteristic of the catalyst. Two types of the coefficient of amplification are defined. The applicability of these definitions is given by the type of the bimolecular system. In a simple example it is shown that the concept of amplification is meaningful in these systems. Furthermore, two rules, analogous to those for a coupling of amplifiers, are derived for the two basic modes of coupling of catalytic systems. Thus, in biological systems the catalytic reactions may be regarded as biologically effective amplifiers.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 583-596 
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    Notes: Abstract It is postulated that cell hydration is governed by adsorption of water on cell proteins in accord with the Bradley adsorption isotherm, and that the action of a solute in the surrounding solution is to lower the vapor pressure of the solution so that cell water adsorption is decreased by moving down the Bradley isotherm. From these concepts, it is derived that cell volume (V) should be related to solute concentration (x) by the equationV=−E log10 x+F whereE andF are constants which are independent of type of solute. For a non-adsorbed solute this agrees well with experimental data. For solutes which are adsorbed by cell proteins, a correction in the above equation may be necessary at higher solute concentrations, which is shown to be compatible with various experimental data. The types of experiments which are generally used to support the osmotic pressure theory of cell hydration agree equally well with the adsorption theory. The virtue of the adsorption theory is that, unlike the osmotic pressure theory of cell swelling, it is compatible with permeability of the cell membrane to solutes, which has been experimentally observed for various solutes.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 657-664 
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    Notes: Abstract Conditions under which a time varying electromagnetic field problem (such as arises in electrophysiology, electrocardiography, etc.) can be reduced to the conventional quasistatic problem are summarized. These conditions are discussed for typical physiological parameters.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 711-718 
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    Notes: Abstract A compartmental lung model with any number of synchronously filling and emptying functional chambers and a common dead space or conducting region is considered. It is shown that the model gives rise to an output, in an open circuit washout determination, which is a weighted sum of exponentials. From estimates of these weights and exponential components, estimates of the model parameters can be recovered. Relations giving the unique correspondence between the output parameters and the model parameters are derived and the existence and uniqueness of solutions established.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 677-690 
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    Notes: Abstract A physical model that incorporates all the experimental information on the formation of the visual pigment rhodopsin is presented. The visual pigments consist of a chromophore bound to an appropriate protein. Thus rhodopsin (λm 505 mμ) is formed by a Schiff’s base linkage C19H27CH=NH+-opsin (λm 440 mμ) between 11-cis retinal (λm 380 mμ) and the protein opsin (λm 280 mμ). It is found that there exists a red shift in the spectrum of rhodopsin from the Schiff’s base. The model brings an explanation for this red shift. It is shown that such a shift may be due to a charge transfer process (R. S. Mulliken,J. Am. Chem. Soc.,74, 811–824, 1952) between an electron at the double bond of carbons C11−C12 and an atomic orbital of the sulphur present in cysteine. This provides an explanation of the presence of SH-groups in the protein after the absorption of light. A one-electron approximation is used and the dipole momentμ NV ; hence, the oscillator strengthf of the transitionNV is estimated and compared with the experimentally determined extinction coefficient ∈m by mixing 3.5×10−3 M of 11-cis retinal with 8.3×10−5 M of cysteine at pH ranges 6 through 8. Reasonable agreement is found. Solvent, concentration and temperature dependence are shown also.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 841-862 
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    Notes: Abstract By assigning coordinates to the environmental function space comprising all physical and mental stimuli, mathematical interpretations can be based on such terms as adaptability, and reactivity which relate to individuals interacting with their environment within a society. These psychometric concepts are incorporated into a framework of functional analysis, which permits the optimization of social change by maximizing the satisfaction integral through the use of variational or dynamic programming methods in conjunction with some optimal social policy. The approach provides a mathematical connection between psychology and sociology, and further demonstrates that existing forms of government are simulated by differential equations belonging to the same general class. The synthesis of new classes of functional equations describing social progress is visualized as a legitimate objective for abstract mathematical sociology.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 863-877 
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    Notes: Abstract The theory of imitative behavior as developed hitherto by the author was based on the assumption that each individual has a natural preference for one of the two mutually exclusive behaviors. The endogenous fluctuations in the central nervous system then result in the individual’s exhibiting the two behaviors alternately with a relative frequency determined by the natural preference. Imitation shifts the natural preference towards one or the other of the two mutually exclusive behaviors. In the present approach it is suggested that the relative frequency of the two mutually exclusive behaviors exhibited alternately is determined by maximizing the “satisfaction function” of the individual, that is by hedonistic factors rather than by purely random fluctuations. Corresponding equations are developed. It is shown that in certain cases, even when the imitation effect is absent, a sort of “pseudoimitation” may occur. Another situation leads, in the case of two individuals only, to a complete “division of labor” between them, with respect to the two behaviors. Each one exhibits only one behavior. After that imitation is introduced explicitly by assuming that imitation by one individual or another increases the satisfaction function of the imitating individual. Results thus obtained show similarities to the results of the old theory.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 11-17 
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    Notes: Abstract Linear birth and death processes are used to derive simple expressions for sequential extinction times and gene fixation probabilities in asexual populations.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 1-10 
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    Notes: Abstract We are here concerned with the functionf which assigns to each pointP of an object the numberf(P) which is the shortest distance fromP to the border. This function appears in various guises in diverse biological studies. The functionf(P) is itself a measure of shape—or more precisely, an infinite set of measures, one for each point (and hence, in view of its geometric definition, usually in a form inconvenient for use). Thus in this paper we sought a reasonable representative of this infinite set of measures, namely themean of the numbersf(P) asP ranges over all points of the entity. Computability studies are developed for various classes of shapes. For example, (1) the mean for a lamina bounded by a polygon circumscribable about a circle of radiusr isr/3; (2) the mean for a domain bounded by a polyhedron circumscribable about a sphere of radiusr isr/4. The transition from pointwise to piecewisef(P), especially in the non-convex case, requires working with inequalities.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 19-40 
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    Notes: Abstract A mathematical model for traveling bands of motile and chemotactic bacteria in the presence of cell growth and death is examined. It is found that asymptotic traveling wave solutions exist in the absence of chemotaxis, due to the balance of growth, death and random motility. Thus random motility confers the ecological advantage of population propagation through migration into nutrient-rich regions. The presence of chemotaxis amplifies this advantage by moving more cells into higher nutrient concentration regions, resulting in larger and faster bands. Therefore there seem to be two types of traveling bands that can be attained by chemotactic bacteria in the presence of growth and death: (1) these growth/death/motility bands; and (2) pure chemotactic ‘Keller-Segel'-type bands. Comparison to experimental observations by Chapman in 1973 indicate that the latter seem to be formed. The relationship between these two types of solution is at present uncertain. The growth/death/motility bands may have relevance on longer time or distance scales characteristic of microbial ecological systems.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 115-125 
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    Notes: Abstract Based on the principle of minimum power, a mathematical model of the pathological functional state of the oxygen transport system is presented. The model is used to determine the optimal functional parameters of the oxygen transport system in hyperthyroidism, anemia and hypertension. Theoretical results are compared with clinical data.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 139-153 
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    Notes: Abstract A modified SIRS model is developed as a framework for the study of epizootiological dynamics in an insect-pathogen system. Linearized stability analysis reveals that the system with one immune and one susceptible host class can exhibit stable, periodic or unstable behavior depending on model parameters. In general, high pathogenicity, short pathogen propagule lifespan and high host reproductive rate are stabilizing influences. Pathogen transmissibility and propagule production/host do not influence local stability. The effect of seasonal host reproduction is studied because most insect hosts are seasonal in temperate climates. The basic stability dependence on model parameters holds except as modified by the length of the reproduction interval. The results of this study are compared with the recent work of Anderson and May.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 175-184 
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    Notes: Abstract The random predator-prey type interactions of the population species in a random varying environment have been investigated. The Fokker-Planck equation for the transition probability, corresponding to the stochastic differential equations established from Lotka-Volterra equations by the introduction of randomness and variability, has been integrated in the form of a path integral. The transition probabilities for extinction or survival of one or several species have been approximately evaluated and investigated.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 155-174 
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    Notes: Abstract If two microbial populations compete for a single resource in a homogeneous environment with time invariant inputs they cannot coexist indefinitely if the resource competed for is not renewed by biological activity within the system. Mathematical studies have shown that in a predator-prey system, where the resource (prey) is self-renewing, the two competitors (predators) can coexist in a limit cycle. This suggests that if the resource competed for is renewed by biological activity within the system coexistence can occur in any microbial system provided that it exhibits the same features as, but without being, a predator-prey one. A food chain involving commensalism, competition and amensalism is presented here. Two subcases are considered. It is only when maintenance effects are taken into account that coexistence, in limit cycles, can occur for this system. Limit cycle solutions for the system are demonstrated with the help of computer simulations. Some necessary conditions for coexistence are presented, as are some speculations regarding the possible physical explanations of the results.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 127-137 
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    Notes: Abstract The branching structure of the mammalian arterial tree has been known to be close to that of an optimal conduit system of the minimum work model characterized as the branch system of constant wall shear rate. The physiological mechanism producing such construction was considered to be based on the local response of arterial caliber induced by the wall shear stress (shear rate × blood viscosity) and thereby maintaining this stress constant, which was previously observed at the canine common carotid artery shunted to the external jugular vein. The stress levels at various parts of the arterial system estimated from available data fell within ±50% of the mean (15 dyn/cm2), which was consistent with the value predicted from the model. Theoretical analyses on the cost function of the model indicated that the suspected variation of shear rate levels in the arterial tree due to the anomalous changes in blood viscosity which might bring about 3- to 4-fold differences between the minimum and maximum shear rates would cause less than 10% increase in the total energy cost. It was concluded that a local adaptive response to wall shear stress is the mechanism which effectively optimizes the design of the arterial tree.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 185-185 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 187-203 
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    Notes: Abstract The structure of the genetic code is related to a Gray code, which is a plausible theoretical model for an amino acid code. The proposed model implies that the most important factor in shaping the code was the effects of mistakes in translation, not effects of mutations. Another possible implication is that the preservation of stiffness and flexibility at appropriate places in a protein chain is as important in protein structure as the appropriate placement of hydrophilic (external) and hydrophobic (internal) residues. Other results are a simple conceptualization of the relationships among the 20 amino acids and their relations to their codons. The detailed relationships are summarized in the following ‘similarity alphabet’: ala, thr, gly, pro, ser; asp, asn, glu, gln, lys; his, arg, trp, tyr, phe; leu, met, ile, val, cys; (ATGPS DNEQK HRWYF LMIVC in the one-letter code). This alphabet falls into four groups of amino acids: small, external, large, internal. The approximate relation of the groups to their codons is expressed as: the first base of a codon controls size—a purine means a small amino acid, a pyrimidine means large; the middle base controls cloisterednes—purine means external, pyrimidine means internal. These relationships express the minimum change principle upon which the code appears to be founded.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 269-282 
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    Notes: Abstract A theoretical study of the Brusselator model with non-uniform distribution of component A and a concentration-dependent diffusion coefficient has been performed. Numerical simulation reveals that a variable diffusion coefficient alters the bifurcation pattern and the stability properties of the steady-state as well as periodic solutions. A simple approximate method, based on one-point collocation, has been proposed to analyze the bifurcation phenomena for the case of fixed boundary conditions and low system size.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 283-294 
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    Notes: Abstract In this paper the effects of the occurrence of cut trees in the topological analysis of branching patterns have been studied. It is assumed that branches are removed at random from the trees. We prove that, for both the segmental and terminal growth models, the probability distributions of the cut trees are identical to those of complete trees.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 247-268 
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    Notes: Abstract The goal of this work is an examination of capillary exchange models as mathematical operators. The concentration function relations for the Krogh cylinder of a single capillary, basic to many organ models, are studied via the theory of operators on the Lebesgue normed spacesL p[0,∞], (1〈-p〈-∞). A discussion is included of theL p -normsvis-à-vis the coefficient of variation currently used in finding capillary parameters and evaluating parameter searches. The capillary model determines two operators on the space of locally integrable functions: O K (relating extravascular concentration to intravascular) and K a, k (relating intravascular concentration to input), wherek is the ratio of permeabilitysurface area (PS) to extravascular volume, and α is the ratio of PS to flow. These operators are shown to induce contractive (‖O K ‖ p 〈-1, ‖K a, k ‖ p 〈-1), isotone, linear operators onL p . The uniform convergence relation $$K_{a,k} = \mathop {\lim _{(p)} }\limits_{N \to \infty } \left( {\sum\limits_{n = 0}^N {P_n (a)O_k^n } } \right)$$ (as operators onL p) is derived, whereP n (a) is the Poisson probabilitye −a a n /n!. For the important special cases ofp=∞, 1, 2 the norms are found (‖Ok‖=‖Ka,k‖p=1). Consideration is also given to the norms and operators when the functions involved are limited to a finite interval of time.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 295-326 
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    Notes: Abstract One particular kind of structure offers possible explanations, for long-term memory, efficient consolidation of stored information from the environment, clustering of data strings and multimodal functioning. It is a possible model for pieces of neural structure and its use offers a uniform method for both studying and constructing an extensive class of mechanisms.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 327-332 
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    Notes: Abstract Levenshtein dissimilarity measures are used to compare sequences in application areas including coding theory, computer science and macromolecular biology. In general, they measure sequence dissimilarity by the length of a shortest weighted sequence of insertions, deletions and substitutions required, to transform one sequence into another. Those Levenshtein dissimilarity measures based on insertions and deletions are analyzed by a model involving valuations on a partially ordered set. The model reveals structural relationships among poset, valuation and dissimilarity measure. As a consequence, certain Levenshtein dissimilarity measures are shown to be metrics characterized by betweenness properties and computable in terms of well-known measures of sequence similarity.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 337-337 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 333-336 
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    Notes: Abstract It is pointed out that the methane flux measured experimentally for certain ponds and swamps is quantitatively consistent with a commensal dependence of Methanobacteria on O2-chemotactic motile aerobic bacteria. The Methano species is thereby shielded from oxygen and provided with carbon dioxide for the anaerobic production of methane.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 357-370 
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    Notes: Abstract A sufficient condition is given for stochastic boundedness persistence of a top predator in generalized Lotka-Volterra-type stochastic food web models in arbitrary bounded regions of state space. The main result indicates that persistence in the corresponding deterministic system is preserved in the stochastic system if the intensities of the random fluctuations are not too large.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 371-377 
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    Notes: Abstract One of Bobisud's models for the evolution of cannibalism is reanalyzed by applying the method of finding evolutionarily stable strategies (or ESS's). It is demonstrated that ‘no cannibalism’ never will be an ESS if the initial rate of cannibalism is too large. It is further demonstrated that individual selection may even result in the evolution of cannibalism during food abundance. Some empirical case studies are briefly discussed in relation to this model.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 379-387 
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    Notes: Abstract A computer algorithm is presented which equiprobably generates any member of the set of all directed trees withk labeled terminal nodes and unlabeled interior nodes. The algorithm requires roughlyk 2 /2 storage locations. The one-time initialization requiresO(k 2 ) time, while generating each tree requiresO(k) time.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 515-527 
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    Notes: Abstract The comparison of several sequences is central to many problems of molecular biology. Finding consensus patterns that define genetic control regions or that determine structural or functional themes are examples of these problems. Previously proposed methods, such as dynamic programming, are not adequate for solving problems of realistic size. This paper gives a new and practical solution for finding unknown patterns that occur imperfectly above a preset frequency. Algorithms for finding the patterns are given as well as estimates of statistical significance.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 501-514 
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    Notes: Abstract A new development is introduced here in the use of dynamic programming in finding pattern similarities in genetic sequences, as was first done by Needleman and Wunsch (1969). A condition of pattern similarity is defined and an algorithm is given which scans any set of similarities and screens out those which fail to meet the condition. When the set to be scanned contains every pair of segments, one from each of two given sequences of lengthsm andn (i.e. every possible location for a pattern similarity), then it completes the scan in a number of computational steps proportional tom·n, leaving those pairs of segments which satisfy the similarity condition. The algorithm is based on the concept of match density, as suggested by Goad and Kanehisa (1982).
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 529-543 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper concerns sequences of letters in which certain “distinguished” words are of interest. Such sequences arise as data in numerous fields including genetics and neuroscience. A probability distribution is given for the number of occurrences of a chosen word in a randomized sequence of letters. Such words are considered “favored” if they occur more than expected at random. Favored words have been discovered in nerve impulse trains and may reflect a neural coding scheme.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 545-552 
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    Notes: Abstract As the volume of protein sequence data grows, rapid methods for searching the protein sequence database become of primary importance. Rigorous comparison of sequences is obtained with the well-known dynamic programming algorithms. However, these algorithms are not rapid enough to use for routinely searching the entire database. In this paper we discuss some methods that can be used for rapid searches.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 553-566 
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    Notes: Abstract We give algorithms for computing the extent of similarity between two or three sequences of letters. The similarity measures we consider include a penalty for inserting gaps within the sequence in order to enhance similarity. The magnitude of the penalty for gaps is assumed to be independent of their size in order to accommodate certain biological applications. Our algorithm for three sequence comparisons, which is based on solving a system of recursive equations, improves upon the efficiency of existing methods. Although the system of recursive equations utilized by the algorithm is quite complicated as it stands, it has none the less been simplified by appeal to combinatorial considerations.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 567-577 
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    Notes: Abstract Well-known dynamic programming algorithms exist for comparing two finite sequences inO(N 2) time and storage, whereN is the common sequence length. Extensions to the comparison ofM finite sequences requireO((2N) M) time and storage, making such algorithms difficult even forM=3. A simple generalization of the sequences makes it possible to obtain some results about the geometry of sequence alignments. These ideas suggest heuristic approaches to problems of comparing several sequences. IfM sequences are known to be related by a binary tree, they can be aligned inO(MN 2) time andO(N 2+NM) storage.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 661-672 
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    Notes: Abstract Protein sequences of the Dayhoff databank of 1984 have been analyzed to evaluate the occurrences of the 400 dipeptides and 8000 tripeptides. Expected values and standard deviations for the di- and tripeptides were determined by Monte Carlo and binomial approximation. A condensed format containing this information, labeled a uniqueness diagram, is presented and made available in the form of a microfiche.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 827-844 
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    Notes: Abstract In two-state sliding filament models of muscle contraction a partial differential equation must be solved to find the cross-bridge distribution functionn(x, t). In this paper the analytical form of this function is obtained by integration along the characteristic line and special cases are presented in which the explicit expression forn(x, t) can be completely determined. These analytical solutions provide a direct mathematical connection between the microscopic contraction parameters contained in the kinetic theories and macroscopic muscle dynamics and are thus used to investigate what parameters influence the transient contractile tension in typical experimental conditions. The results of this investigation are consistent with relevant aspects of muscle physiology.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 845-857 
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    Notes: Abstract Experiments on random binary, ternary, etc. (P=2, 3,…, 10) switching nets are reported. Behavioral cycle lengths are examined as functions of output variety,P, input connectance,K, and net size,N. Overall, output variety appears an influential, well-behaved net property. Strong, but well-behaved interactions appear among net variables. In high connectance nets, median cycle length grows approx. asP N/2. Other factors constant, one-connected nets show the shortest cycles, and connectance effects appear to converge asymptotically aroundN. Data for cycle length as a function of net size suggest a concavity not compatible with the Kauffman “square root law” (Kauffman, 1969). Evidence of a positive relationship between cycle length and run-in length is found in two-input nets; weaker evidence is obtained that in higher connectance nets this relationship becomes negative in sign. The “modular complexity” ofP〉2 nets is examined briefly.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 46 (1984), S. 869-877 
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    Notes: Abstract The influence of topographical situation on the spread of infection is studied. The investigation is based on a multigroup model. The population under consideration is thought to be divided into subpopulations living in regions that are separated from each other by natural barriers (mountains). Infection is carried from one region to another by migrating infectives. Migration is possible only along the river system so that the structure of the epidemiological network is that of a symmetric tree. The results allow comparison of the velocity of propagation of the epidemic for different geographical situations and allow quantification of the “channel-effect”, according to which mountainous regions are channels rather than barriers to the spread of an epidemic.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 97-115 
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    Notes: Abstract A stochastic model is developed for an enzyme reaction in an open linear system. The proposed model assumes that the open system maintains the concentration of substrate and inhibitor at constant levels and that the product molecules are removed from the system by a first order reaction. Stochastic models for several enzyme reactions occurring in this open system are shown to correspond to special cases of theGI/M/∞ queue. Takács’ (1958) results for this queueing system are used to obtain the stochastic properties of the enzyme systems. A specific model we studied assumed completely competitive inhibition in an open system. The stationary distribution for the number of product molecules in the system is obtained. The enzyme reaction which incorporated the “intermediate chain hypothesis” can also be investigated by the queueing theory approach. It is shown that for this open system, if the model which incorporated the intermediate chain hypothesis has the same deterministic properties as the Michaelis-Menten model, then the latter has greater stochastic variation than the former.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 153-153 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 117-128 
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    Notes: Abstract The existing methods to solve the problems of pulsatile flow in the cardiovascular system are based on either linear axisymmetric equations or non-linear one-dimensional equations. The solutions thus obtained give only a mediocre comparison with measurements. In this paper, a non-linear axisymmetric theory is proposed. The starting point of the present theory is a third degree polynomial representation of the velocity profile. Integral methods are then applied to obtain the governing equations. To ascertain the accuracy of the theory proposed above, the calculations for a simple case involving pulsatile flow in a long rigid tube were performed. The results are: (a) the average velocities compare very well with exact solutions and (b) the velocity profiles for a given frequency agree very well with exact solutions for flow in small tubes, but tend to differ as tube size is increased.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 129-151 
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    Notes: Résumé Le but de ce travail est la mise en évidence d’éventuels “patterns” temporels privilégiés de potentiels d’action neuronaux masqués par la superposition d’une activité aléatoire. Dans la première partie, on propose un modèle susceptible de rendre compte de cette activité aléatoire. Dans la seconde, on expose une méthode d’extraction des patterns privilégiés, compatible avec les paramètres du modèle neuronal proposé. Son algorithme fait notamment intervenir l’estimation de la fonction d’expectation. Cette méthode peut, en fait, ment intervenir l’estimation de la fonction d’expectation. Cette méthode peut, en fait, être appliquée à l’étude de séries temporelles d’événements dans des domaines très divers.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 155-156 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 355-372 
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    Notes: Abstract An effort is made to begin widening the scope of kinetics by merging the concepts and point of view of molecular set theory with the stochastic approach to kinetics, beginning with the simplest unimolecular molecular set transformation. In this spirit the new concept ofmolecular set variable is introduced as the basic unit of kinetics as opposed to simply the traditionalconcentration (or cardinality) unit, connoting that the composition as well as the size of a molecular set are significant dynamic features of a system. The changes in state (or “value”) of the molecular set variable are characterized by a Markovian stochastic process and the relationship between this process and the corresponding unimolecular process for the concentration variable introduced earlier is discussed. The possible role of molecular set theory in terms of the underlying biomathematical structure of relational biology is also considered.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 387-401 
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    Notes: Abstract The problem of the forms of plants and models of branching are discussed using experimental data on the mistletoe. The number of branches by division, the distribution of divisions with regard to the number of branches per division and to the level of division, the geometrical characters of branches according to the level of division and the host, the stability of model are studied. One gives an interpretation of the model of branching as a model of growth.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 373-386 
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    Notes: Abstract A quantum model for the general enzymic reaction,E+S ⇌ ES → P, is presented, starting with the assumptions that any chemical substanceS, which may be a substrate for a particularE (S)-enzyme is a microphysical system and any enzymeE-molecule, capable of interacting with anS-substrate is a “measuring system” which will “measure” one or more of theS-observables. According to the above assumptions a stochastic model of the reaction is constructed and a computer simulation of the steady state performed. The results thus obtained predicted fluctuations in the enzymic reaction rate, function of the substrate “perturbation”. On an experimental basis it is demonstrated that the irradiation of an enzymic substrate with low energies results in the inducement of a dose-dependent oscillatory behavior in the corresponding enzymic reaction rate. In the reaction type, the oscillations thus induced in theE-activity by the corresponding substrates are out-of-phase, realizing a biochemical discriminating net. Likewise, in an $$S_1 \xleftarrow{{E_1 }}S\xrightarrow{{E_2 }}S_2$$ reaction type, the oscillations induced by the irradiatedS-substrate in the activities of the respective enzyme, realize a biochemical switching net.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 233-243 
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    Notes: Abstract A neuron is assumed to receive synaptic input of both excitatory and inhibitory natures from a large number of neighboring neurons; it is also assumed that a large number of such impulses are required to raise the neuron’s transmembrane potential to its threshold potential, at which it “fires” or “spikes”. The model is similar to one of Gerstein and Mandelbrot, except that in the absence of input an exponential decay of potential toward a resting level is introduced. Computational methods of determining the spike timeinterval distribution are discussed, along with the inverse problem of estimating the parameters of the system from observed spike time-interval data.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 311-318 
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    Notes: Abstract Moens-Korteweg relations are developed for the velocity of wave propagation through an orthotropic elastic tube based on the three dimensional equations of elasticity. Numerical examples are presented for the femoral artery of a dog and several other orthotropic materials. These results are compared with those obtained from the equations of motion for an orthotropic elastic medium.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 335-341 
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    Notes: Abstract Up to the present time, the following property of the product component in the reversible one substrate-one intermediate-one product enzymic mechanism has been taken only as anassumption, viz., during the course of the reaction, the time-rate of change of product concentration is never negative and the product concentration never exceeds its equilibrium value. Applying the methods of the geometric theory of ordinary differential equations it is shown that this result follows as a direct deduction from the differential equations governing the mechanism together with the initial conditions. Further, the nature of the equilibrium point as a stable node is established.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 319-333 
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    Notes: Abstract An integro-differential equation treatment of multi-compartment systems is developed which permits formal analysis of the incomplete data which is available from partly accessible, partly injectable systems. New transport functions are defined which can be obtained directly from the experimental data. These functions serve to characterize the communication and topology between different accessible compartments and also the reentrant contributions from inaccessible sites. The method gives solutions consistent with those of the differential equation approach when the system is uniformly contiguous and accessible, more complete solutions than those of the integral equation approach when all measured compartments are injectable, and in addition provides complete or partial solutions for certain otherwise analytically intractable systems. Detailed numerical illustrations of the method are given.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 405-405 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 395-401 
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    Notes: Abstract In continuation of previous work (Rashevsky,Some Medical Aspects of Mathematical Biology, Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas, 1964, Chap. 23 and Appendix 14), the study of the effects of the physical parameters of the cells of endocrine glands on the onset of sustained periodical oscillations in the interaction between the anterior pituitary and the thyroid hormones is generalized to include the possible effect of the intercellular fluid and of the degree of vascularization. Some conclusions of the previous study remain valid although some modifications must be made. A decreased relative volume of the intercellular fluid and an increased vascularization favor the conditions for sustained oscillations. The permeability of the cells and the permeability of the capillaries appear explicitly in the expressions which show the conditions for sustained periodicities.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 437-449 
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    Notes: Abstract A general model of a large 2m-ploid breeding population, withr loci ands h alleles at the h th locus is considered. It is assumed that the population is bisexual, non-overlapping and breeds by random mating. The genotypic structure of the population is presented as a bilinear form in the gametic output vectors where the genotype distribution is in the matrix form. Using the concept of the segregation distribution, the genotype proportions in the (n+1)st generation are given. An equilibrium condition for random chromosome segregation is obtained in terms of gene frequencies.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 541-548 
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    Notes: Abstract The rigidity of the skull and the inertial characteristics and incompressibility of its contents cause the elastic cerebral arteries and veins to act over brief periods of time like rigid tubes of relatively small diameter. Poiseuille's law is applicable to their behavior. The use of this law, in combination with the fact that, during brief intervals, the total volume of the cerebral arteries and veins remains constant, permits derivation of a mathematical expression for the average arterial flow in terms of an average arterial radius. The differentiated equation has five positive roots which represent maxima and minima of the average flow in terms of the average arterial radius. The theoretical results have physiological implications and potential clinical usefulness, which are discussed.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 549-563 
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    Notes: Abstract Equations are derived for the flow of an anisotropic fluid in a tube. It is argued that these provide a model for arterial blood flow. Particular attention is paid to the effect of radial differences in hematocrit. Sequels to this paper (Bull. Math. Biophysics,29, 565–574; forthcoming, 1967) will respectively demonstrate possible wall-directed forces on the erythrocyte and enlarge on the physiological consequence of hematocrit variations. The present article develops the basic equations and explores the possible role of anisotropic effects in blood flow.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 575-581 
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    Notes: Abstract Concentric circular lines are present on X-ray diffraction patterns of DNA. They cannot be accounted for by the double helix model. It is suggested that they may indicate the presence of double helical side chains.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 781-791 
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    Notes: Abstract An extension of an earlier model simulating the effects of light on the drosophila eclosion rhythm is presented. The effects of variable light intensity are described. This allows not only the simulation of certain experiments not covered by the earlier model, but also it permits an extension of the model to other organisms. By changing only its sensitivity to light the model simulates the phase response curves of certain mammals as well as Aschoff’srule.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 827-829 
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    Notes: Abstract Previous derivations of the Stevens Power Law relating loudness to intensity assume, in addition to level invariance, that the relation must be analytic or at least differentiable. This last condition is replaced here by the weaker one of requiring only continuity.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 403-412 
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    Notes: Abstract This paper is the second of a pair dealing with some mathematical properties of metabolic steady state. An investigator wishing to compute the rate of appearance and/or disappearance of a metabolite in steady state within an intact biological system will usually appeal to a method involving radioactive tracers. It is shown that while the investigator’s choice of the mode of tracer administration (constant infusion or single injection) is largely arbitrary, the mathematical interpretation of the results may depend upon the presence or absence of gradients in certain of the variables of the system. The latter will be the case if the system is sampled at a point within the distribution space of the metabolite which is not a source point but is otherwise arbitrary. In order to deduce a formula which gives the required rate, he must have knowledge of the gradient of concentration of the traced substance, and sometimes of the gradient of specific activity.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 413-424 
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    Notes: Abstract Making a medical diagnosis consists of correlating knownpatterns of disease with the various classes of clinical data elicited from the history, physical examination, and batteries of tests relative to the diagnostic dynamics symbolized by atree branching into the various possible diagnostic decisions. In this paper a relational mathematical model of the reasoning aspects of the conventional medical diagnostic process is suggested as a way of extracting a general, formal concept of medical diagnosis. Computer implementation of the model is discussed briefly.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 33 (1971), S. 425-437 
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    Notes: Abstract Biomedical data in the form of series of observations made on a single process at regular intervals constitute a discrete time series and are eligible for time series methods of analysis. The models yielded by this analysis provide the framework within which exponential smoothing methods may operate on the data to provide recurrent forecasts of future states of the process. Because the forecasts may be made on an individual basis and are sensitive to the past behavior of the individual process, the methods are presented as being potentially of great utility in the management of chronic and progressive illnesses. When incorporated into automated testing and diagnostic systems, the forecasting method will provide the capability of making prognoses for large numbers of individuals, quickly, routinely and reproducibly.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 33-40 
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    Notes: Abstract A method of analyzing thymidine labeling in a population of cells is formulated. The formulation establishes a unique relation between a specific set of labeling data and a specific set of cells in the population, viz. that set of cells having a particular chromosome number. The analysis employs a cell-state variable, i.e., a quantity which specifies the progress of a cell through its lifecycle. This variable is defined in terms of the nucleo-protein content and configuration of the chromosomes. The relation mentioned above leads immediately to an expression for the number of cells present at a particular time following labeling which have a given amount of label per cell and a given chromosome number.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 41-56 
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    Notes: Abstract An equation relating radiation-induced metaphase delay to the dose-rate and duration of irradiation is obtained. The equation is derived from a model specifying the effects of radiation on the normal chromosome coiling process. The basic assumptions of the model are (1) that normal coiling proceeds by contractile protein acting on segements of a viscoelastic chromosomal fiber; (2) that radiation causes cross-linking of adjacent chromosomal fibers which hinders the coiling process.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 57-65 
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    Notes: Abstract Normal micturition is controlled primarily by a neural system. Certain physical effects become evident when neural control is destroyed, and the automatic or autonomous bladder phenomena occur. It is shown in this paper that a physical system simulating the alternating periods of continence and voiding of the automatic bladder may comprise only passive elastic components, and that periodic voiding does not per se imply neural control.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 91-94 
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    Notes: Abstract A number of inaccuracies in previous papers are pointed out and amended, and some implications of the correct situation are outlined.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 67-89 
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    Notes: Abstract We investigate a model of the renal medulla in which active NaCl transport is restricted to the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop. The model contains a vas rectum, a loop of Henle, salt, and water. The model generates interstitial osmolality curves consonant with the known functioning of the kidney in water diuresis. Using data from the white rat and the curves generated by the model, one can predict the permeability of the thin limb of Henle's loop to NaCl and the percentage of total renal blood flow entering the inner medulla. In this model interstitial osmolality at the papilla can be about twice plasma osmolality, so that NaCl transport restricted to the outer medulla can contribute significantly to the work required in producing a hypertonic urine. However, the interstitial osmolality monotonically decreases proceeding from the junction of the outer and inner medulla to the papilla, and the maximum interstitial osmolality in the outer medulla is greater than the maximum interstitial osmolality in the inner medulla. Thus we infer that a source of active transport located in the inner medulla is needed to explain the high osmolalities observed in hydropenia. A sketch of an alternative model, a “lineal multiplication mechanism”, for the renal concentrating process is presented in which active transport in the inner medulla is restricted to active salt transport by the collecting duct. The lineal multiplication mechanism makes no use of counter-current multipliers in the inner medulla.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 95-121 
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    Notes: Abstract Starting from the basic flux equation, it is possible to obtain an integral form relating the current componentsI i at an arbitrary pointr 2 to the distribution of mobilities and concentrationsc i, potential forces $$\bar \mu $$ , and chemical productivityp i without any restrictive assumptions such as constant mobilities, constant field, steady state, or electrical neutrality. The equation is $$\begin{gathered} I_i (r_2 ) = G_i (r_2 )\left[ {\Delta \bar \mu _i - \int_{r_1 }^{r_2 } {z_i } FA\left( {p_i - dc_i /dt} \right)\left( {\frac{1}{{G_i (r)}}} \right)dr} \right]; \hfill \\ G_i (r) = 1/\int_{r_1 }^r {\frac{{dr}}{{z_i^2 F^2 c_i u_i }}.} \hfill \\ \end{gathered} $$ On the basis of this equation, it is possible to give a more general and systematic development of the basic equations of electrophysiology which clarifies a number of questions concerning the physical interpretation of and the necessary and sufficient conditions for the applicability of some of the standard equations and gives their proper extensions to more general conditions. It is found that the relation between the current components and chemical reactions present arises in a very natural way via the continuity equation and enables one to discuss the incorporation of the metabolic and active transport parameters by assuming a very general physical condition. On the basis of this general integration technique one may then compare the physical interpretation of the differential conductance, the chord conductance and the integral conductance.
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    Notes: Abstract Previous papers by F. M. Snell (Jour. Theor. Biol.,8, 469–479, 1965) and M. A. Fox and H. D. Landahl (Bull. Math. Biophysics,27, Spec. Issue, 183–190, 1965) have found that the formulation by previous authors for the oxygen flow rates through hemoglobin solution as a function of pressure determined by E. Hemmingsen and P. F. Scholander (Science,132, 1379–1381, 1960) did not give a satisfactory quantitative fit of the curve for constant pressure difference. The suggestion of Fox and Landahl that the Bohr effect involving the shift in acidity accompanying the oxidation of Hb should give rise to voltage and pH differences in oxyhemoglobin transport is examined in more detail. In this paper, the previous expressions for the total oxygen flow rate in terms of the end point concentrations are extended to include the effects of the electrical field. Estimates of the potential difference shows it to be negligible. A derivation of a voltage-pH relation shows that the Nernst relation does not apply and a negligible voltage difference does not preclude a pH shift which is the more probable explanation of the discrepancies observed. Several other predictions suitable for experimental testing are made.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 153-174 
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    Notes: Abstract A model for the human eye-movement mechanism is derived. The derivation is based on a literature search directed toward identifying and mathematically describing each component through physiological and anatomical considerations. It is felt that although certain parameter values may not be exactly correct (for the data were taken from a wide variety of animals), we can place a great deal of confidence in the configuration.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 175-179 
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    Notes: Abstract The urethra as seen on X-ray films may show alternate regions of constriction and distension. That these regions do not necessarily correspond to high and low tensions in the circumferential muscle sheath is shown by calculated stable configurations under uniform tension.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 139-152 
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    Notes: Abstract The discussion as to whether societies are organisms andvice versa has been going on for a long time. The question is meaningless unless a clear definition of the term “organism” is made. Once such a definition is made, the question may be answered by studying whether there exists any relational isomorphism between what the biologist calls an organism and what the sociologist calls society. Such a study should also include animal societies studied by ecologists. Both human and animal societies are sets of individuals together with certain other objects which are the products of their activities. A multicellular organism is a set of cells together with some products of their activities. A cell itself may be regarded as a set of genes together with the products of their activities because every component of the cell is either directly or indirectly the result of the activities of the genes. Thus it is natural to define both biological and social organisms as special kinds of sets. A number of definitions are given in this paper which define what we call here organismic sets. Postulates are introduced which characterize such sets, and a number of conclusions are drawn. It is shown that an organismic set, as defined here, does represent some basic relational aspects of both biological organisms and societies. In particular a clarification and a sharpening of the Postulate of Relational Forces given previously (Bull. Math. Biophysics,28, 283–308, 1966) is presented. It is shown that from the basic definitions and postulates of the theory of organismic sets, it folows that only such elements of those sets will aggregate spontaneously, which are not completely “specialized” in the performance of only one activity. It is further shown that such “non-specialized” elements undergo a process of specialization, and as a result of it their spontaneous aggregation into organismic sets becomes impossible. This throws light on the problem of the origin of life on Earth and the present absence of the appearance of life by spontaneous generation. Some applications to problems of ontogenesis and philogenesis are made. Finally the relation between physics, biology, and sociology is discussed in the light of the theory of organismic sets.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 29 (1967), S. 189-190 
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