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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Keywords: 550 - Earth sciences
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/book
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  • 2
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 137-144 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Composting ; Explosives ; Propellants ; Thermophilic ; Mesophilic ; Bioremediation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Composting was investigated as a bioremediation technology for clean-up of sediments contaminated with explosives and propellants. Two field demonstrations were conducted, the first using 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetraazocine (HMX), hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX), and N-methyl-N,2,4,6-tetranitroaniline (tetryl) contaminated sediment, and the second using nitrocellulose (NC) contaminated soil. Tests were conducted in thermophilic and mesophilic aerated static piles. Extractable TNT was reduced from 11840 mg/kg to 3 mg/kg, and NC from 13090 mg/kg to 16 mg/kg under thermophilic conditions. Under mesophilic conditions, TNT was reduced from 11 190 mg/kg to 50 mg/kg. The thermophilic and mesophilic half-lives were 11.9 and 21.9 days for TNT, 17.3 and 30.1 days for RDX, and 22.8 and 42.0 days for HMX, respectively. Known nitroaromatic transformation products increased in concentration over the first several weeks of the test period, but decreased to low concentrations thereafter.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Fructo-oligosaccharide ; 1-Kestose ; Glycoprotein ; Fructosyl-transferring activity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Two extracellular β-fructofuranosidases (E-1 andE-2) fromAureobasidium sp. ATCC 20524, producing 1-kestose (1F-β-fructofuranosyl-sucrose) from sucrose, were purified to homogeneity. Molecular weights of the enzymes were estimated to be about 304000 (E-1) and 315000 (E-2) Da by gel filtration. The enzymes contained 33% (w/w) (E-1) and 27% (w/w) (E-2) carbohydrate. TheK m values for sucrose ofE-1 andE-2 andE-2 were 0.34 and 0.28 M, respectively. were 0.34 and 0.28 M, respectively. The enzymatic profiles of these enzymes were almost identical to intracellular enzymesP-1 andP-2 except for the differences in carbohydrate content andK m values ofE-2 andP-2.
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  • 4
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 149-161 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Toxin ; Secondary plant metabolite ; Allelochemical ; Insecticide ; Mycotoxin ; Endocytobiont
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Many species of insects cultivate, inoculate, or contain symbiotic fungi. Insects feed on plant materials that contain plant-produced defensive toxins, or are exposed to insecticides or other pesticides when they become economically important pests. Therefore, it is likely that the symbiotic fungi are also exposed to these toxins and may actually contribute to detoxification of these compounds. Fungi associated with bark beetles, ambrosia beetles, termites, leaf-cutting ants, long-horned beetles, wood wasps, and drug store beetles can variously metabolize/detoxify tannins, lignins, terpenes, esters, chlorinated hydrocarbons, and other toxins. The fungi (Attamyces) cultivated by the ants and the yeast (Symbiotaphrina) contained in the cigarette beetle gut appear to have broad-spectrum detoxifying abilities. The present limiting factor for using many of these fungi for large scale detoxification of, for example, contaminated soils or agricultural commodities is their slow growth rate, but conventional strain selection techniques or biotechnological approaches should overcome this problem.
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  • 5
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 163-172 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Biosensors ; Process control ; Enzyme thermistor ; Immunoassay ; Bio-field effect transistor
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary A short review about the biosensor research activities for bioprocess monitoring in the F.R.G. after its reunification is given. The principles of biosensor applications are presented. In situ sensors and sensors based on the principles of flow injection analysis are studied. Some applications of a four-channel enzyme thermistor, bio-field effect transistors, and immunoanalysis systems for real process monitoring are presented.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Vibrio vulnificus ; Oyster ; Monoclonal antibody ; Most probable number ; Enzyme immunoassay
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Oysters, suspended particulate matter (SPM), sediment and seawater samples were collected from West Galveston Bay, Texas over a 16-month period and analyzed for the presence ofVibrio vulnificus, a naturally-occurring human marine pathogen. Detection and enumeration ofV. vulnificus was performed using a species-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb FRBT37) in an enzyme immunoassay (EIA)-most probable number (MPN) procedure capable of detecting as few as 2000 target organisms.V. vulnificus was not detected in seawater, oyster or SPM samples during the cold weather months, but was detected at low levels in several sediment samples during this time period. Increased levels of the organism were first observed in early spring in the sediment, and then in SPM and oysters. The major increase inV. vulnificus occurred only after the seawater temperature had increased above 20°C and the winter-spring rainfall had lowered the salinity below 16‰. The highestV. vulnificus levels at each site were associated with suspended particulate matter. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that (1)V. vulnificus over-winters in a floc zone present at the sediment-water interface, (2) is resuspended into the water column in early spring following changes in climatic conditions, (3) colonizes the surfaces of zooplankton which are also blooming during early spring and (4) are ingested by oysters during their normal feeding process.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 235-238 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Biodegradation ; Pseudomonas putida ; Immobilization ; Sodium cyanide
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Pseudomonas putida, isolated from contaminated industrial wastewaters and soil sites, was found to utilize sodium cyanide (NaCN) as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. Cells, immobilized in calcium alginate beads (1–2 mm diameter) were aerated in air-uplift-type fluidized batch bioreactor containing 100–400 ppm of NaCN. Degradation of NaCN was monitored for 168 h by analyzing gaseous and dissolved ammonia (NH3), CO2, pH and optical density. The results indicated that the alginate-immobilized cells ofP. putida were able to degrade NaCN into NH3 and CO2 in a time-dependent manner.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 229-234 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Heat shock protein (HSP) ; Yeast ; Saccharomyces ; Viability ; Thermotolerance ; Ethanol tolerance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Heat shock and ethanol stress of brewing yeast strains resulted in the induction of a set of proteins referred to as heat shock proteins (HSPs). At least six strongly induced HSPs were identified in a lager brewing strain and four HSPs in an ale brewing strain. Four of these HSPs with molecular masses of approximately 70, 38, 26 and 23 kDa were also identified in two laboratory strains ofSaccharomyces cerevisiae. The appearance of HSPs correlated with increased survival of strains at elevated temperatures and high concentrations of ethanol. These results suggest that HSPs may play a role in the ethanol and thermotolerance of yeasts. The properties of these proteins and membrane fatty acids in relation to heat and ethanol shock are being investigated.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 239-245 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Novel polysaccharide ; Bacillus licheniformis ; Raffia venifera ; d-Glucose ; d-Mannose ; d-Xylose
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary A polysaccharide producing strain ofBacillus licheniformis was isolated from exudate of raffia palm,Raffia vinifera. The optimum conditions for growth and polysaccharide production have been investigated and established. No appreciable polysaccharide was formed on glucose. It grew best in Czapek-Dox media with sucrose as the carbon source. The polysaccharide has been characterized as a heteropolymer containingd-glucose,d-mannose andd-xylose.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 269-269 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: β-Fructofuranosidase ; Deglycosylation ; Aureobasidium ; Enzymatic stability
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Most of the carbohydrate moiety of β-fructofuranosidaseP-1 fromAureobasidium sp. ATCC 20524 was removed by endo-β-N-acetylglucosaminidase F. A subunit of 94000 Da was observed in SDS-PAGE after deglycosylation. TheK m value for sucrose was not changed by deglycosylation but the stability at pH 4–5 and 50°C was decreased. The deglycosylated enzyme was more sensitive to proteases such as pronase E and subtilisin than the native enzyme. It is considered that the carbohydrate moiety of β-fructofuranosidaseP-1 contributes to the stability of the enzyme but is not essential in its catalytic function.
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  • 12
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 1-20 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract An organism persists only if it satisfies internal and external constraints. Within the organism networks of processes meet the constraints. In such networks a principle of matching often obtains: the pattern of coupling among processes matches the correlation among constraints. That is, a module—a cluster of coupled processes—meets a constraint. Dissociable modules meet dissociàble constraints. A hierarchy of modules meets a hierarchy of constraints. We have inquired whether such matching is predicted by an optimality criterion in a simple example. We find that in an ensemble of networks with unreliable processes, the networks that meet the constraints with highest reliability obey the principle of matching. The difference in reliability between modular and nonmodular networks that meet the same constraints is a function of the probability of success per process. Our results suggest that this difference is maximal at a probability of success that increases monotonically with the number of processes in the network.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 59-75 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract A method is described for estimating the distribution and hence testing the statistical significance of sequence similarity scores obtained during a data-bank search. Maximum-likelihood is used to fit a model to the scores, avoiding any costly simulation of random sequences. The method is applied in detail to the Smith-Waterman algorithm when gaps are allowed, and is shown to give results very similar to those obtained by simulation.
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  • 14
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 401-412 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract We develop a theory for host seeking decisions in mosquitoes that explicitly considers the tradeoffs mosquitoes face in allocation to somatic and gametic function. Specifically, we consider conditions under which mosquitoes should seek out nectar and blood hosts upon encountering host odours. Results from development of a dynamic model that considers free and crop energy states suggest that mosquitoes should seek out blood hosts under a wide variety of conditions but that decisions to seek nectar depends upon crop volume, concentration and free energy. This pattern arises because mosquitoes carrying large crop loads are constrained in their ability to obtain large blood meals due to space limitations in the abdomen. The predicted patterns of behaviour are supported by published observations of mosquito behaviour.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 413-422 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract In behavioral ecology, diet selection is often predicted by using a theory in which it is assumed that behaviors have evolved to maximize the rate of intake of energy. In this theory, it is assumed that fitness is a monotonic function of energy intake. An alternative is to deal directly with fitness, measured in terms of expected reproduction, and thus connect short term behavior with reproduction. Following the usual assumptions of the theory of diet choice, fitness satisfies a partial differential-difference equation. Conditions under which rate maximizing and state variable theories of diet selection yield identical predictions are identified. When predation, as well as starvation, is a source of mortality, the identification is not as complete.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 445-464 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract Environmental uncertainty can be both a cause and consequence of chance variation in many of the phenotypic factors associated with the control of clutch size in birds. When such uncertainty inflates or otherwise influences the variance associated with expected reproductive success for any genotype, it will also influence the resulting phenotypic optima. Random variation that affects the evolution of clutch size optima explicitly may occur both within (intra-) and across (inter-) generations. Examples of intra-generational uncertainty could include chance variation in: (1) the quality and quantity of offspring, (2) parental quality, and (3) temporal resources like food. Inter-generational uncertainty would include chance variation in demographic and population characters. With respect to clutch (or litter) size, almost all forms of uncertainty tend to favor an optimum (genetic) strategy with a clutch that is smaller than the clutch associated with the apparent or actual maximal fitness of an individual parent. The overall effect of all the components of uncertainty can be evaluated through the integration of all this phenotypic variation: however each step of the integration is a conditional expectation of each component. Therefore, a single factor analysis may indicate a false optimum, and an integrated analysis of all components is necessary to evaluate the importance of their individual and joint effects on the adaptive evolution of clutch size.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 503-519 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract A difference equation model for the dynamics of a semelparous size-structured species consisting of juvenile and adult individuals is derived and studied. The adult population consists of two size classes, a smaller class and a larger more fertile class. Negative feedback occurs through slowed juvenile growth due to increased total population levels during the developmental period and consequently a smaller adult size at maturation. Intra-specific competition coefficients are size dependent and measure the strength of intra-specific competition between juveniles and adults. It is shown that equilibrium states in which adults and juveniles occur together at all times are in general destabilized by significantly increased juvenilevs adults competition with the result that stable periodic cycles appear, in which the generations alternate in time and hence avoid competition. This result supports the tenet that intra-specific competition between juveniles and adults is destabilizing. Exceptions to this destabilization principle are found, however, in which populations exhibiting non-equilibrium, aperiodic dynamics can be equilibrated by increase competition between juveniles and adults. This occurs, for example, when adult fertility and competition coefficients are significantly size class dependent.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 537-561 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract An epithelial cell is modeled as a single compartment, bounded by apical and basolateral cell membranes, and containing two nonelectrolyte solute species, nominally NaCl and KCl. Membrane transport of these species may be metabolically driven, or it may follow the transmembrane concentration gradients, either singly (a channel) or jointly (a cotransporter). To represent the effect of stretch-activated channels or shrinkage-activated cotransporters, the membrane permeabilities and cotransport coefficients are permitted to be functions of cell volume. When this epithelium is considered as a dynamical system, conditions are indicated which guarantee the uniqueness and stability of equilibria. Experimentally, many epithelial cells can regulate their volume, and such volume regulatory capability is defined for this model. It is clearly distinct from dynamical stability of the equilibrium and requires more stringent conditions on the volume-dependent permeabilities and cotransporters. For a previously developed model of the toad urinary bladder (Strieteret al., 1990,J. gen. Physiol. 96, 319–344) the uniqueness and stability of its equilibria are indicated. The analysis also demonstrates that under some conditions a second stable equilibrium may appear, along with a saddle-node bifurcation. This is illustrated numerically in a modified model of the epithelium of the thick ascending limb of Henle.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 687-694 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 649-672 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract Models of the dynamical interactions important in generating immune reactivity have generally assumed that the immune system is a single well-stirred compartment. Here we explicitly take into account the compartmentalized nature of the immune system and show that qualitative conclusions, such as the stability of the immune steady state, depend on architectural details. We examine a simple model idiotypic network involving only two types of B cells and antibody molecules. We show, for model parameters used by De Boeret al. (1990,Chem. Eng. Sci. 45, 2375–2382), that the immune steady state is unstable in a one compartmental model but stable in a two compartment model that contains both a lymphoid organ, such as the spleen, and the circulatory system.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 839-873 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Notes: Abstract Using the chromium release assay and the single cell assay in agarose, we study the cytotoxic reaction of the MHC-restricted T lymphocyte clones P89:15 and P1:3, which recognize distinct but specific tumour antigens on the surface of syngeneic P815 mastocytoma cells. We propose a mathematical model which describes these experiments, accounts for the strongly non-Michaelian behaviour of the reaction and permits us to estimate the kinetic parameters characterizing effector-target conjugation and lethal hit delivery. The results show that the binding and lytic activity of effector cells is modulated by the number of targets bound to them. The binding of a second target by an effector having already a target bound is facilitated; on the other hand, an effector having bound two targets delivers a lethal hit more slowly than one with a single target bound. We investigate the role of these kinetic properties in the competition between the process of tumour progression due to cancer cell replication and the process of tumour regression due to T lymphocyte cytotoxic activity. For both clones, we estimate the effector-target ratio beyond which rejection prevails. This ratio is nine times larger for P1:3 than for P89:15. Furthermore, our analysis suggests that there exists an optimal specificity minimizing this ratio. Deviations from this optimum, be it in the sense of an increase or decrease of specificity, tendsto stabilize the tumoural state: a situation which in the broader context of the immune response evolution and regulation can be viewed as animmune response dilemma.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 929-938 
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    Notes: Abstract In this paper a stochastic model for a two-compartment system which incorporates Erlang residence time distributions (i.e. the residence times have the gamma distribution where the shape parameters assume integer values only) into each compartment is generalized to include random rate coefficients. Analytical forms of the model are derived for the case where the rate coefficients have gamma densities. A relationship is established between the new models and existing models that are in current practical usage.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 939-955 
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    Notes: Abstract Oscillations and chaos can be modelled and observed in a realistic simulation model of interacting prey-predator populations based on Monte Carlo simulation methods. These nonlinear phenomena are linked with some biological and physical bifurcation parameters and mathematical tools from dynamical systems theory may be used in order to characterize this behaviour. Chaotic dynamics are therefore, in our simulation, more the rule than the exception, and are related to delays associated with spatial degrees of freedom.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 1023-1038 
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    Notes: Abstract Cells displaying the classic multidrug resistant (MDR) phenotype possess a transmembrane protein (p170 or P-glycoprotein) which can actively extrude cytotoxic agents from the cytoplasm. A mathematical model of this drug efflux pump has been developed. Outward transport is modeled as a facilitated diffusion process. Since energy-dependent efflux of cytotoxic agents requires that ATP also bind to p170, the model includes a dynamic calculation for efflux rate which considers Michaelis-Menten kinetics for both the substrate agent and ATP. The final system consists of one partial differential equation (PDE) for the facilitated diffusion of substrate agents out of the cell a 2×2 ordinary differential equation (ODE) system for the dynamic calculation of the ATP-ADP pool, and a dynamic algebraic calculation of the efflux rate given substrate levels at the interior cell membrane interface and ATP levels in the cell. A stability analysis of the ATP-ADP pool distribution and a simplistic closed form solution of the linearized PDE are included. Numerical simulations are also provided.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 1039-1056 
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    Notes: Abstract Reentry in the heart is the repeated excitation of the same tissue by a single excitation wave; it is responsible for several types of cardiac arrhythmia. The simplest model which permits the phenomenon of reentry is two laterally coupled excitable fibers; in this paper we examine such a model in order to establish a basis for the understanding of the fundamental physical processes underlying the process of reentry. Two versions of the FitzHugh-Nagumo equations are used to develop complementary numerical and analytical results for the coupled fiber model. On the basis of numerical studies, regions of qualitatively different behaviour are mapped in the parameter space of excitation threshold and coupling strength between the fibers, and the effect of the rate of recovery is explored. Some of these regions are also obtained analytically, in good agreement with the numerical results. Finally, the results are discussed in the light of recent work on the role of the anisotropy of cardiac tissue in the initiation of reentrant activity in the heart.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 54 (1992), S. 1069-1081 
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    Notes: Abstract A sigmoid curve with three fitting parameters is proposed as a descriptive model for the spatial velocity field in one-dimensional growth of plant organs. Analytic expressions are derived for the relative elemental growth (REG) rate, the position and value of the REG rate maximum, the length of the growth zone, the inverse of the growth trajectory and cell length in the “elongation only” zone. The expressions are fit to published data to characterize the effects of environmental variation on growth of monocotyledonous roots. The simple expressions for growth may prove useful in mechanistic models. The fitted curves summarize more than a decade of observations and thus provide a challenge to theorists.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1-13 
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    Notes: Abstract A simple one-dimensional model of single-species populations is studied by means of computer simulations. Although the model has a rich spectrum of dynamics including chaotic behavior, the introduction of survival thresholds makes the chaotic region so small that it can be hardly observed. Stochastic fluctuations further reduce the chaotic region because they accidentally lead populations to extinction. The model thus naturally explains the observation that the majority of natural populations do not show chaotic behavior but a monotonic return to a stable equilibrium point following a disturbance.
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    Notes: Abstract Current understanding of the pattern of proliferation within intestinal crypts involves the notion of a cutoff region introduced by Cairnieet al. (Exp. Cell. Res. 39, 539–553, 1965b). (Cells produced above the cutoff are non-cycling, whereas cells produced below the cutoff are cycling.) They contrasted the predicted distribution of proliferation in the extreme cases of a cutoff of width 0 (a sharp cutoff) with one eight cells wide (a slow cutoff) and concluded that the data were better explained by the latter. We have shown that crypt size variation artificially broadens the apparent distribution of proliferating cells in the crypt (Totafurnoet al., Biophys. J. 54, 845–858, 1988). Here we show that the measurement and analysis of crypts of a specified height reduces this artifact. This work introduces the use of distance from the crypt base (in microns) to specify the location of cells within the crypt as an improvement over the cell position ordering traditionally used in the determination of the distribution of proliferating cells. We also show how to explicitly correct for several artifacts in the measurement of the labelling index. We conclude that cell proliferation within the crypt is more localized than previously realized; in fact, a cutoff as slow as eight cells wide is rejected.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 141-154 
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    Notes: Abstract Multiple string (sequence) alignment is a difficult and important problem in computational biology, where it is central in two related tasks: finding highly conserved subregions or embedded patterns of a set of biological sequences (strings of DNA, RNA or amino acids), and inferring the evolutionary history of a set of taxa from their associated biological sequences. Several precise measures have been proposed for evaluating the goodness of a multiple alignment, but no efficient methods are known which compute the optimal alignment for any of these measures in any but small cases. In this paper, we consider two previously proposed measures, and given two computationaly efficient multiple alignment methods (one for each measure) whose deviation from the optimal value isguaranteed to be less than a factor of two. This is the novel feature of these methods, but the methods have additional virtues as well. For both methods, the guaranteed bounds are much smaller than two when the number of strings is small (1.33 for three strings of any length); for one of the methods we give a related randomized method which is much faster and which gives, with high probability, multiple alignments with fairly small error bounds; and for the other measure, the method given yields a non-obviouslower bound on the value of the optimal alignment.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 197-212 
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    Notes: Abstract The kinematics of helical motion are descirbed for an organism treated as a rigid body with six degrees of freedom relative to the organism's frame of reference, i.e. the organism can translate in the direction of, or rotate around any of, three orthogonal axes fixed to its body. Equations are derived that express the unit vectors of the Frenet trihedron and the torsion and curvature of the trajectory in terms of the organism's translational and rotational velocities. These equations permit description of the radius, pitch, angular velocity and axis of a helical trajectory in terms of the translational and rotational velocities of the organism swimming along that trajectory. The results of this analysis are then used in two later papers that describe how organisms can orient to an external stimulus.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 257-257 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 231-255 
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    Notes: Abstract Organisms that move along helical trajectories change their net direction of motion largely by changing the direction, with respect to the body of the organism, of their rotational velocity (Crenshaw and Edelstein-Keshet, 1993,Bull. math. Biol. 55, 213–230). This paper demonstrates that an organism orients to a stimulus field, such as a chemical concentration gradient or a ray of light, if the components of its rotational velocity, with respect to the, body of the organism, are simple functions of the stimulus intensity encountered by the organism. For example, an organism can orient to a chemical concentration gradient if the rate at which it rotates around its anterior-posterior axis is proportional to the chemical concentration it encounters. Such an orientation can be either positive or negative. Furthermore, it is true taxis—orientation of the axis of helical motion is direct. It is neither a kinesis nor a phobic response—there is no random component to this mechanism of orientation.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 277-294 
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    Notes: Abstract A basic but neglected property of neuronal trees is their finite length. This finite length restricts the length of a segment to a certain maximum. The implications of the finite length of the tree with respect to the segment length distributions of terminal and intermediate segments are shown by means of a stochastic model. In the model it is assumed that branching is governed by a Poisson process. The model shows that terminal segments are expected to be longer than intermediate segments. Terminal and intermediate segments are expected to decrease in length with incrasing centrifugal order. The results are compared with data fromin vivo pyramidal cells from rat brain and tissue cultured ganglion cells from chicken. A good agreement between data and model was found.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 345-364 
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    Notes: Abstract Shape and size of elongating cells were examined in three plant tissues: the adaxial epidermis of the petiole ofZebrina pendula L., the abaxial epidermis ofAnacharis densa L. leaves and the abaxial epidermis of the scale leaf ofAllium cepa L. Based on a few simple assumptions, the expected probability distribution frequencies (pdf) for cell length and number of adjacent walls were calculated. Actual data of cell lengths closely approximated those expected with the pdfs being asymmetrical since there are more younger, shorter cells than older, longer cells. Data for number of lateral walls of real cells were similar to that expected and these walls increase in compensating mechanism exists to maintain a constant range of cell lengths through many cell generations. It is expressed by longer than average new daughter cells dividing relatively soon while shorter than average new daughter cells divide after a relatively long cycle.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 365-384 
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    Notes: Abstract Diffusion driven instability in reaction-diffusion systems has been proposed as a mechanism for pattern formation in numerous embryological and ecological contexts. However, the possible effects of environmental inhomogeneities has received relatively little attention. We consider a general two species reaction-diffusion model in one space dimension, with one diffusion coefficient a step function of the spatial coordinate. We derive the dispersion relation and the solution of the linearized system. We apply our results to Turing-type models for both embryogenesis and predator-prey interactions. In the former case we derive conditions for pattern to be isolated in one part of the domain, and in the latter we introduce the concept of “environmental instability”. Our results suggest that environmental inhomogeneity could be an important regulator of biological pattern formation.
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    Notes: Abstract The particular dynamics of the previously proposed model of a catalytic network formed byn error-prone self-replicative species without and with superimposed competition is analysed. In the first case, two situations are studied in detail: a uniform network in which all the species are inter-coordinated in the same way, and a network with a species differentiated in its catalytic relation with the remaining elements. In the second case, the superimposed competition is introduced at two levels: first, as an asymmetry in one of the network species amplification factor considering a null self-catalytic vector, and secondly, as a non-null self-catalytic vector with no asymmetry in the other propertics of the species. This kind of system does not present complex behaviour and can be adequately deseribed by performing a standard linear analysis, which gives direct information on the asymptotic behaviour of the sytem. Finally, the biological implications of this analysis within the framework of biological evolution are discussed.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 451-464 
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    Notes: Abstract A theoretical model is proposed for the formation of cell distribution patterns in the slug stage of the cellular slime moldDictyostelium discoideum. The equilibrium distribution of two types of cells, prestalk and prespore, is obtained by minimizing the free energy, which is defined in terms of differential chemotaxis, differential cell adhesion and randomness of cell movement. Resulting distributions show various segregation patterns of cell types. The condition for cell sorting is obtained from stability analysis of the set of diffusion equations governing the evolution of cell type distribution and the concentration of chemoattractant. The intensities of differential chemotaxis and random cell movement are quantitatively evaluated from experimental data to show that two cell types can sort themselves completely by these forces.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 655-674 
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    Notes: Abstract Multicell spheroids, small spherical clusters of cancer cells, have become an importantin vitro model for studying tumour development given the diffusion limited geometry associated with many solid tumour growths. Spheroids expand until they reach a dormant state where they exhibit a grossly static three-layered structure. However, at a cellular level, the spheroid is demonstrably dynamic with constituent cells migrating from the outer well-nourished region of the spheroid toward the necrotic central core. The mechanism that drives the migrating cells in the spheroid is not well understood. In this paper we demonstrate that recent experiments on internationalization can be adequately described by implicating pressure gradients caused by differential cell proliferation and cell death as the primary mechanism. Although chemotaxis plays a role in cell movement, we argue that it acts against the passive movement caused by pressure differences.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 675-691 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 693-693 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 695-713 
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    Notes: Abstract In recent years, methods of consensus, developed for the solution of problems in the social sciences, have become widely used in molecular biology. Westudy a method of consensus originally due to Watermanet al. (Waterman, Galas and Arratia. 1984. Pattern recognition in several sequences: consensus and alignment.Bull. math. Biol. 46, 515–527) which is used to identify patterns or features in a molecular sequence where a pattern can vary in position within a given window. We show that some well-known consensus methods of the social sciences, the median and the mean, are special cases of this method for certain choices of the parameters used in it and give a precise account of the parameters for which these special cases arise. We also show that the specific parameters used in the method of Watermanet al. make their method equivalent to the median procedure which is widely used in the social sciences.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 745-780 
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    Notes: Abstract We develop a model for the idiotypic interaction between two B cell clones. This model takes into account B cell proliferation, B cell maturation, antibody production, the formation and subsequent elimination of antibody-antibody complexes and recirculation of antibodies between the spleen and the blood. Here we investigate, by means of stability and bifurcation analysis, how each of the processes influences the model's behavior. After appropriate nondimensinalization, the model consists of eight ordinary differential equations and a number of parameters. We estimate the parameters from experimental sources. Using a coordinate system that exploits the pairwise symmetry of the interactions between two clones, we analyse two simplified forms of the model and obtain bifurcation diagrams showing how their five equilibrium states are related. We show that the so-called immune states lose stability if B cell and antibody concentrations change on different time scales. Additionally, we derive the structure of stable and unstable manifolds of saddle-tye equilibria, pinpoint their (global) bifurcations and show that these bifurcations play a crucial role in determining the parameter regimes in which the model exhibits oscillatory behavior.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 781-816 
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    Notes: Abstract Two types of behavior have been previously reported in models of immune networks. The typical behavior of simple models, which involve B cells only, is stationary behavior involving several steady states. Finite amplitude perturbations may cause the model to switch between different equilibria. The typical behavior of more realistic models, which involve both B cells and antibody, consists of autonomous oscillations and/or chaos. While stationary behavior leads to easy interpretations in terms of idiotypic memory, oscillatory behavior seems to be in better agreement with experimental data obtained in unimmunized animals. Here we study a series of models of the idiotypic interaction between two B cell clones. The models differ with respect to the incorporation of antibodies, B cell maturation and compartmentalization. The most complicated model in the series has two realistic parameter regimes in which the behavior is respectively stationary and chaotic. The stability of the equilibrium states and the structure and interactions of the stable and unstable manifolds of the saddle-type equilibria turn out to be factors influencing the model's behavior. Whether or not the model is able to attain any form of sustained oscillatory behavior, i.e. limit cycles or chaos, seems to be determined by (global) bifurcations involving the stable and unstable manifolds of the equilibrium states. We attempt to determine whether such behavior should be expected to be attained from reasonable initial conditions by incorporating an immune response to an antigen in the model. A comparison of the behavior of the model with experimental data from the literature provides suggestions for the parameter regime in which the immune system is operating.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 865-867 
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 869-889 
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    Notes: Abstract We show that the existence of diffusional resistance due to the presence of a solid phase can have a positive effect on the metabolic reactions of plant cells. In this case the efficiency of metabolic reactions, defined as the ratio of rate of production of biomass of aggregated cells/rate of production of biomass of dispersed cells, can be greater than unity for a certain range of aggregate sizes for both solid spheres (common plant cell aggregates) and hollow spheres (e.g.Volvox aggregates). This means that, under appropriate conditions, plant cells tend to stay in the aggregated form to improve the efficiency of their metabolic reactions. The result of the present analysis provides an explanation as to why aggregates of plant cells are observed under typical culture conditions.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 937-952 
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    Notes: Abstract The Hodgkin and Huxley equations model action potentials in squid giant axons. Variants of these equations are used in most models for electrial activity of excitable membranes. Computational tools based upon the theory of nonlinear dynamical systems are used here to illustrate how the dynamical behavior of the Hodgkin Huxley model changes as functions of two of the system parameters.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 919-936 
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    Notes: Abstract The description of the “microbial loop” has led to some major changes in our understanding of nutrient cycling within aquatic ecosystems. It now appears that in many settings it is not uncommon for some 50% of phytoplankton production to be diverted into microbial pathways rather than passing up to higher trophic levels. As a result the microbial loop is responsible for enhanced and rapid nutrient cycling at the very base of the food web. Since tight recycling is often associated with unstable positive feedback, we use a model to examine the possible repercussions in more detail. The model simulates the dynamics of the microbial loop and finds it to greatly affect the way in which aquatic primary production responds to nutrient pulses.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 953-971 
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    Notes: Abstract The maintenance activity of plants is investigated in terms of a simple model. Maximization of a certain biomass fraction we refer to asnonactive biomass is postulated. Optimal behaviour of plants according to this principle is explicitly derived and expressed depending on environmental conditions. Several interesting hypotheses result, e.g. a quadratic law relating specific growth rate and gross rate of photosynthesis. A qualitative comparison with data from the literature is performed, with a special emphasis on the question whether plants stressed by air pollutants repair optimally. Regarding long-term constant environmental conditions, no data were found that contradict optimal behaviour. Exact quantitative testing of the theory is desirable, appropriate experiments are suggested.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 993-1011 
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    Notes: Abstract In an earlier work a model of the autocrine and paracrine pathways of tumor growth control was developed (Michelson and Leith. 1991. Autocrine and paracrine growth factors in tumor growth.Bull. math. Biol. 53, 639–656). The target population, a generic tumor, was modeled as a single, homogeneous population using the standard Verhulst equation of logistic growth. Mitogenic signals were represented by modifications to the Malthusian growth parameter and adaptational signals were represented by modifications to the carrying capacity. Three growth scenarios were described: (1) normal tissue wound healing, (2) unperturbed tumor growth, and (3) tumor growth in a radiation damaged environment, a phenomenon termed the Tumor Bed Effect (TBE). In this paper, we extend those results to include a “triad” of growth factor controls (autocrine, paracrine and endocrine) and heterogeneity of the target population. The heterogeneous factors in the model represent either intrinsic, epigenetic or environmental differences in both normally differentiating tissues and tumors. Three types of growth are modeled: (1) normal tissue differentiation or wound healing, assuming no communication between differentiated and undifferentiated cell compartments; (2) normal wound healing with feedback inhibition, due to signalling from the differentiated compartment; and (3) the development of hypoxia in a spherical tumor. The signal processing within the triad is discussed for each model and biologically reasonable constraints are defined for limits on growth control.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1039-1061 
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    Notes: Abstract A transient multispecies model for quantifying microbial space competition in biofilm is derived from existing models, introducing a new approach to biomass detachment modelling. This model includes inert biomass, substrate diffusion and utilization rate within the biofilm and diffusional layers. It predicts the evolution of biofilm thickness, bulk substrate concentration, species distribution and substrate concentration within the biofilm. A zero-dimensional transient model is described. Its steady-state solution is used to set up initial conditions of the one-dimensional model and case computation towards steady-state solution. Some numerical tools have been developed, enabling fast computation on microcomputers. Simulations show the validity of a zero-dimensional model and perturbated systems are also simulated. Simulations with experimental data give acceptable results.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1025-1038 
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    Notes: Abstract Recently, we proposed a new model of DNA sequence evolution (Arquès and Michel. 1990b.Bull. math. Biol. 52, 741–772) according to which actual genes on the purine/pyrimidine (R/Y) alphabet (R=purine=adenine or guanine, Y=pyrimidine=cytosine or thymine) are the result of two successive evolutionary genetic processes: (i) a mixing (independent) process of non-random oligonucleotides (words of base length less than 10: YRY(N)6, YRYRYR and YRYYRY are so far identified; N=R or Y) leading to primitive genes (words of several hundreds of base length) and followed by (ii) a random mutation process, i.e. transformations of a base R (respectively Y) into the base Y (respectively R) at random sites in these primitive genes. Following this model the problem investigated here is the study of the variation of the 8 R/Y codon probabilities RRR,..., YYY under random mutations. Two analytical expressions solved here allow analysis of this variation in the classical evolutionary sense (from the past to the present, i.e. after random mutations), but also in the inverted evolutionary sense (from the present to the past, i.e. before random mutations). Different properties are also derived from these formulae. Finally, a few applications of these formulae are presented. They prove the proposition in Arquès and Michel (1990b.Bull. math. Biol. 52, 741–772), Section 3.3.2, with the existence of a miximal mean number of random mutations per base of the order 0.3 in the protein coding genes. They also confirm the mixing process of oligonucleotides by excluding the purine/pyrimidine contiguous and alternating tracts from the formation process of primitive genes.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1199-1210 
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    Notes: Abstract It is believed that the native folded three-dimensional conformation of a protein is its lowest free energy state, or one of its lowest. It is shown here that both a two-and three-dimensional mathematical model describing the folding process as a free energy minimization problems is NP-hard. This means that the problem belongs to a large set of computational problems, assumed to be very hard (“conditionally intractable”). Some of the possible ramifications of this results are speculated upon.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1133-1182 
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    Notes: Abstract A model employing separate dose-dependent response functions for proliferation and differentiation of idiotypically interacting B cell clones is presented. For each clone the population dynamics of proliferating B cells, non-proliferating B cells and free antibodies are considered. An effective response function, which contains the total impact of proliferation and differentiation at the fixed points, is defined in order to enable an exact analysis. The analysis of the memory states is restricted in this paper to a two-species system. The conditions for the existence of locally stable steady states with expanded B cell and antibody populations are established for various combinations of different field-response functions (e.g. linear, saturation, log-bell functions). The stable fixed points are interpreted as memory states in terms of immunity and tolerance. It is proven that a combination of linear response functions for both proliferation and differentiation does not give rise to stable fixed points. However, due to competition between proliferation and differentiation saturation response functions are sufficient to obtain two memory states, provided proliferation preceeds differentiation and also saturates earlier. The use of log-bell-shaped response functions for both proliferation and differentiation gives rise to a “mexican-hat” effective response function and allows for multiple (four to six) memory states. Both a primary response and a much more pronounced secondary response are observed. The stability of the memory states is studied as a function of the parameters of the model. The attractors lose their stability when the mean residence time of antibodies in the system is much longer than the B cells' lifetime. Neither the stability results nor the dynamics are qualitatively chanbed by the existence of non-proliferating B cells: memory states can exist and be stable without non-proliferating B cells. Nevertheless, the activation of non-proliferating B cells and the competition between proliferation and differentiation enlarge the parameter regime for which stable attractors are found. In addition, it is shown that a separate activation step from virgin to active B cells renders the virgin state stable for any choice of biologically reasonable parameters.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 153-154 
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    Notes: Abstract Once designed, implementation of an optimal mean-square binary morphological filter is extremely fast, especially when the erosions are implemented on a suitable parallel processor. On the other hand, optimal filter design involes a computationally burdensome search procedure that can, in practice, be intractable. The present paper provides an algorithm for filter design that is based on the relationship between the optimal morphological filter and the conditional expectation. The algorithm proceeds by changing the conditional expectation into a morphological filter while at the same time increasing the mean-square error by a minimal amount. It does so by switching observations between the 1-set and the 0-set of the conditional expectation. The switching algorithm is extremely efficient in many noise environments, and therefore provides a filter design that can be useful for online structuring-element updating. Owing to the relationship between stack and morphological filters, the algorithm is at once useful for finding optimal binary stack filters.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 115-136 
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    Notes: Abstract By considering all orderings of the input samples, which are discrete-time continuous-valued, it is shown here that a weighted median (WM) filter of spanN can be specified unambiguously by 2N−1 consistent linear inequalities relating the weights. This specification is identical to that of a self-dual threshold function with the same weights. It is also shown that WM filters with symmetric weights can be specified by ternary threshold functions. Based on these inequalities, properties of WM filters which can be used to check equivalence of some WM filters are derived.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 137-151 
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    Notes: Abstract Because binary mathematical morphology permits fast local neighborhood operations by flash conversion, it is used extensively in high-speed pattern-recognition computer systems. Further, since anyN-dimensional integer function may be represented by an (N + 1)-dimensional binary (bilevel) function, ordinary two-dimensional graylevel images become three-dimensional binary images. Thus these images may be processed by high-speed flash-conversion computers assuming that a sufficiently compact three-dimensional kernel can be devised. The tetradekahedron of the face-centered-cubic tessellation forms a perfect kernel in three-dimensions. Its neighborhood is compact. It has total symmetry with all 12 neighbors equidistant from the central element. Using this kernel a variety of useful three-dimensional morphological operations may be performed for target track detection, shaded graphics, data clustering, automated focusing, and spatial filtering.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 153-169 
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    Notes: Abstract Two techniques for image restoration are compared in this paper. One is a technique based on the theory of optimal adaptive stack filtering; the other is a recently developed vector detection approach to image restoration. The primary difference between these two techniques is that the optimal detection technique exploits multilevela priori information, while the stack filter uses only single level zero crossing information. The design constraints for stack filters and vector detection are similar. Both approaches rely on the existence of a training sequence for the image source in order to obtain optimal processing. Adaptive stack filters do, however, require a training set of the noise while the optimal detection approach only needs a multivariate parametric representation. The image-restoration performance of these two methods is compared in a signal dependent noise environment characterizing imaging systems with speckle, film-grain, and Poisson shot noise. Comparisons are made using the mean absolute error measure as well as a subjective measure.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 325-352 
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    Notes: Abstract The stability of digital ladder filters close in form, via the lossless discrete integrator (LDI) transformation, to doubly terminatedLC Cauer ladder low-pass filters is studied. The LDI transformation does not necessarily map stable analogue into stable digital filters. Necessary and sufficient conditions for these digital filter to be lossless and for a corresponding doubly terminated filter to be stable are given. LDIs are often used in the design of switched capacitor (SC) filters. For this case we provide a threshold sampling rate above which the SC LDI filter retains the stability of the analogue filter. In spite of the stability problem with the LDI mapping, it has been observed that when applied to simulate analogue filters the resulting filter is stable. It can now be argued that, in these cases, other factors in the determination of the sampling rate leads typically to a choice that is also sufficiently above the threshold rate for stability. The theory described is also useful to derive more general digital filters and to perform the design of stable LDI filters exclusively in the Z-plane without reference to analogue prototypes.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 285-307 
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    Notes: Abstract In this paper we describe a family of operators for constructing nontrivial left and right coprime factorizations under rather weak conditions for a large class of nonlinear feedback control systems that has a stabilizable or unstabilizable plant, using a common criterion of input-output stability. The proposed sufficiency and construction method are based on a generalization of the nonlinear Lipschitz operator theory formulated by us for such systems. This class of generalized nonlinear Lipschitz operators constitutes a very large family (an infinite-dimensional Banach space) of bounded nonlinear operators that describe (part of) the underlying systems. One of the main difficulties in constructing coprine factorizations for nonlinear feedback systems has been in taking care of the nonlinear composite and inverse operators that appear in the closed-loop configuration such that the overall feedback system is well defined in the sense of stability, causality, and uniqueness of the internal signals and such that the coprime factorizations can be achieved. In this paper we show how these difficult issues can be handled nicely under our framework of generalized nonlinear Lipschitz operator theory, at least for a very large class of nonlinear control systems. We give a simple illustrative example to show how these coprime factorizations can actually be characterized and constructed to yield explicit closed-form solutions.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 387-398 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we study the problem of designing a neural network that gives the correct binary representation of a given real number. Previously this problem has been studied by Tank and Hopfield. The network proposed by them exhibits “hysteresis” in the sense that the current vector of the network sometimes converges towards a binary vector that isnot the correct binary representation of the input current. The reason for this is that the network proposed by them has multiple asymptotically stable equilibria. In the present paper, we propose another neural network which has the property that it hasa single, globally attractive equilibrium for almost all values of the input current. Hence, irrespective of the initial conditions of the network, the current vector converges towards the correct binary representation of the input current.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 421-430 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract Concepts of observability and strong observability for singular systems are introduced and characterized geometrically in terms of the system matrices without using the Weierstrass decomposition. Duality relations between observability and controllability and that between reachability and strong observability are established. A canonical form for the action of the output injection group on the set of observable systems is presented.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 455-492 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract Mathematical morphology is becoming increasingly important in industrial vision applications for object recognition and defect inspection. In this paper we define a new function based on mathematical morphology, which we named the Rotationally Invariant Pecstrum (RIP). The RIP is proven to be invariant under rotation regardless of the shape of the structuring element. This paper also discusses how to use the RIP as an object descriptor and studies the effect of using different structuring elements on recognizing objects of different shapes.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 493-508 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract This work presents close-form formulas for typical two-dimensional bandselect linear-phase FIR filters (e.g., band-pass, high-pass, and band-stop filters) optimal in the least-squares sense. Cases of both circular and elliptical symmetry are considered. The formulas refer to the coefficients of the frequency sampling form of the frequency response. Therefore they can either be directly used for filter implementation, if the frequency sampling structure is adopted, or used to obtain the impulse response coefficients via an inverse FFT.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 263-278 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract New characteristics of feedback neural networks are studied. We discuss in detail the question of updating of neurons given incomplete information about the state of the neural network. We show how the mechanism of self-indexing for such updating provides better results than assigning ‘don't know’ values to the missing parts of the state vector. Issues related to the choice of the neural model for a feedback network are also considered. Properties of a new complex valued neuron model that generalizes McCulloch-Pitts neurons are examined.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 391-407 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract This paper deals with chained eigenstructure assignment for strongly controllable singular systems of the form Êx (t)=Â x(t)+B u(t) with state feedback control of the formu(t)=Kx(t)+w(t). The development of our method depends crucially on the properties of standard form singular systems. The closed-loop system will satisfy the following requirements: regularity, impulse-free response and rankÊ arbitrary eigenvalues assignment. This parametric characterization conveniently organizes the nonunique gain matrixK to modify the dynamic response of the systems. The result can be used for discrete-time descriptor systems, in which a zero-value eigenvalue may well be a desired closed-loop eigenvalue. One illustrative example is included.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 453-464 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract An efficient bi-state stochastic gradient is proposed for spontaneous constrained time delay estimation. The quantized stochastic gradient is an approximation of the polarity of the instantaneous delay estimation error. It is adjusted in such a way that it has a much higher probability to move in the correct direction at each iteration so as to enable a speed-up in the delay estimate to converge to global minimum in steady state. The performance of the delay estimator is evaluated statistically and an analytical solution for its convergence behavior is established. It is demonstrated that the proposed algorithm has at least a two-fold improvement in convergence speed when compared with the conventional approach, and this is verified by extensive simulation results.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 503-531 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In this work, we extend the coding theory approach to error control in redundant residue number systems (RRNS). The concept of erasure correction capability in RRNS is introduced. We derive the relationship between the minimum distance and the error detection and error/erasure correction capability. New computationally efficient algorithms are derived for simultaneously correcting single errors and multiple erasures and detecting multiple errors. These algorithms reduce the computational complexity of the previously known algorithms by at least an order of magnitude. Another attractive feature of the algorithms is that all the arithmetic operations are modulo operations. Consequently, the need to process large valued integers is avoided.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 579-587 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract This paper presents a general expression relating the complex-normalized scattering matrix of ann-port network to that of its augmentedn-port network normalizing to then 1 −Ω resistances, where the Darlington equivalent network may be either reciprocal or nonreciprocal.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 211-221 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract Recent research has shown that multilayer feedforward networks with sigmoidal activation functions are universal approximators, and that this holds for more general activations as well. The mathematical underpinning for these results has been various: Kolmogorov's resolution of Hilbert's thirteenth problem; the Stone-Weierstrass theorem; approximation of Fourier and Radon integral representations; and convergence of probability measures. This paper • Rigorously establishes the robustness of feedforward network realizations. • Uses a theorem of Wiener and ideas of translation invariant subspaces to provide conditions for universal approximations toL 1 andL 2 functions by networks, for quite general activation functions. The second result extends and simplifies some of the recent results of Stinchcombe and White, at least for the special cases ofL 1 andL 2 functions.
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    The Geneva risk and insurance review 17 (1992), S. 7-191 
    ISSN: 1554-9658
    Keywords: Risk ; Insurance Demand ; Deterministic Transformations ; Stochastic Dominance ; Expected Utility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Economics
    Notes: Abstract The consequences of a change in a random parameter are determined for a decision model with more than one source of randomness. The two cases of independent and stochastically dependent sources of risk are discussed. Four comparative static theorems are given. These state the effect of first degree stochastically dominant shifts or risk decreases for one random variable while the other random variable is held fixed. Deterministic transformations are used to represent random parameter changes. The results are presented in the context of the coinsurance demand model with a risky insurable asset and background risk.
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    The Geneva risk and insurance review 17 (1992), S. 21-33 
    ISSN: 1554-9658
    Keywords: Insurance Demand ; Multiple Sources of Risk ; Comparative Statics ; Increases in Risk
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    Topics: Economics
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we propose an answer to the following problem of comparative statics in models with multiple sources of risk: How a risk averse agent will change his coinsurance demand when the distribution of the insurable loss is shifted? To answer the question, we first comment on Jack Meyer's results and then we show how an alternate approach leads to more definitive comparative statics.
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    The Geneva risk and insurance review 17 (1992), S. 35-60 
    ISSN: 1554-9658
    Keywords: Ambiguity ; Pricing ; Actuaries ; Decision Processes
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    Topics: Economics
    Notes: Abstract This paper reports on the results of a questionnaire study of pricing decisions made by professional actuaries when the probabilities of a loss are either ambiguous or nonambiguous. Theoretical hypotheses derived from the expected utility model were compared with the implications of procedures described by practicing actuaries. Actuaries were asked to act as consultants to a computer manufacturer concerning the price of a warranty. The suggested prices were considerably higher when probabilities were ambiguous than when they were well-specified. These pricing decisions were consistent with the procedures described by actuaries but inconsistent with predictions from expected utility theory when the risks are perfectly correlated. Further insight into the actual decision process is provided by interviews with actuaries and an analysis of comments written on the questionnaire forms.
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    The Geneva risk and insurance review 17 (1992), S. 61-75 
    ISSN: 1554-9658
    Keywords: Saving ; Borrowing ; Increases in Risk Aversion ; Increases in Risk ; Multivariate NonExpected Utility Model
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    Topics: Economics
    Notes: Abstract We adopt the multivariate non-expected utility approach proposed by Yaari [1986] to provide a characterization of the comparative statics effects of greater risk aversion and of mean-preserving increases in risk on saving and borrowing in the presence of income and interest rate risk. We show that in Yaari's model, it is possible to extend the applicability of the Diamond and Stiglitz [1974] and Kihlstrom and Mirman [1974] (DSKM) single-crossing property to establish a relationship between greater risk aversion and saving (or borrowing) on the basis of the individual's ordinal preferences as long as the two risks are independent. We also demonstrate that the comparative statics effects of a joint mean-preserving increase in random income and interest rate on saving and borrowing can be determined by an extension of the DSKM single-crossing property.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 37-43 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Linear alkylbenzene sulfonate ; Biodegradation ; Plasmid ; Detergent ; Gene probe
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Linear alkylbenzene sulfonate (LAS) is a widely used anionic surfactant. Although approximately 1 million metric tons of LAS are produced annually, relatively little is known about the bacteria or the genetic factors that control LAS degradation in the environment. The objectives of this research were to: i) compare bacterial populations in wastewater and pristine pond systems; ii) determine the frequency of plasmids in bacteria from these sites; and iii) compare the frequency of DNA sequences coding for aromatic catabolism in isolates from these two sites. Plate counts indicated that exposure to wastewater resulted in higher levels of both heterotrophic bacteria and bacteria capable of growing on LAS containing medium (LAS/YEPG). In addition to higher numbers, a higher proportion of heterotrophs from the wastewater system were capable of growth on LAS/YEPG medium. Thus, the high levels of LAS in the wastewater system apparently selected fro organisms that were able to tolerate and/or degrade, it. Mineralization of14C-ring labelled LAS in any habitat related to the presence of organisms that grew on LAS/YEPG. Although may of these isolates could carry out primary degradation, no isolate, could mineralize14C-ring LAS in pure culture. A higher incidence of plasmids was found in bacteria from the wastewater pond and among bacteria that grew on LAS containing medium. However, the presence of plasmid, DNA did not necessarily confer the ability to degrade LAS nor was the ability to degrade LAS dependent on the presence of a plasmid. The incidence of selected genotypes for aromatic catabolism was similar among isolates on LAS/YEPG at both sites, suggesting that LAS ring degradation may be present in other populations or encoded by alternative sequences. In conclusion, LAS mineralization is mediated by a consortium and the evidence that initial attack of LAS is plasmid mediated is inconclusive.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 103-107 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Fatty acid bioconversion ; hydroxy octadecenoic acid
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Previously, we reported the discovery of a new compound, 7,10-dihydroxy-8(E)-octadecenoic acid (DOD) which was produced from oleic acid by a new bacterial isolate PR3 [6,7]. The reaction is unique in that it involves a hydroxylation at two positions and a rearrangement of the double bond of the substrate molecule. Now, we have isolated another compound from the reaction mixture determined by GC/MS to be 10-hydroxy-8-octadecenoic acid (HOD). NMR and IR data indicate that the unsaturation is probablycis. The optimum pH and temperature for the production of HOD by strain PR3 were 6.5 and 30°C, about the same as those for DOD. However, the amount of HOD detected remained small throughout an 48-h reaction period during which the amount of DOD increased sharply. At 48 h of reaction, the ratio between HOD∶DOD was 1∶10. HOD may be an intermediate in the biosynthesis of DOD from oleic acid.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 109-113 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Candida blankii ; Biomass ; d-Xylose ; l-Arabinose ; Acetate
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary All fourCandida blankii isolates evaluated for growth in simulated bagasse hemicellulose hydrolysate utilized the sugars and acetic acid completely. The utilization ofd-xylose,l-arabinose and acetic acid were delayed by the presence ofd-glucose, but after glucose depletion the other carbon sources were utilized simultaneously. The maximum specific growth rate of 0.36 h−1 and cell yield of 0.47 g cells/g carbon source assimilate compared with published results obtained withC. utilis. C. blankii appeared superior toC. utilis for biomass production from hemicellulose hydrolysate in that it utilizedl-arabinose and was capable of growth at higher temperatures.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 115-119 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Mycolytic enzymes ; Trichoderma viride ; Protoplasts ; Cochliobolus lunatus ; Fermentation
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Microorganism useful for the induction of enzymes lytic towards walls of filamentous fungusCochliobolus lunatus were studies. Production of specificTrichoderma viride mycolytic enzymes was studied in a laboratory fermentor. The product with high chitinase and relatively low protease activity gave better yields ofC. lunatus protoplasts than commercial Novozym 234.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 121-125 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Trichoderma viride ; Cellulase production ; Optimized production medium and parameters
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary A 25-l scale protocol is devised for the optimal secretion and recovery of fungal cellulase. Using a selected higher yieldingTrichoderma viride SMC strain, a protocol consisted of: a) an optimized production medium rich in microcrystalline cellulose (MCC), fortified with 1% (w/v) ammonium sulphate, 0.5% (w/v) soybean flour, 0.1% (v/v) Tween-80 and other trace nutrients; b) optimized physical parameters of production, such as an inoculum containing a homogeneous suspension of 6×107 conidia per 1,28±1°C, pH 4.0±0.5, 300±20 rpm, 11000±1000 l/h aeration, and 170–220 h duration; c) optimal recovery through a filter press (450 l/h rate of filtration) followed by precipitation with 2.5–3.0 volumes of acetone (15°C and basket centrifugation (27°C, 1700 rpm)); and d) vacuum drying (35°C, 4–6 h). This afforded 70% recovery of cellulase in the form of white fluffy powder containing 20000±2000 carboxy methyl cellulase and 1000±50 units filter paperase per g activities, with raw material cost of US$ 8–10 per million carboxy methyl cellulase units. During storage for 18 months at 4°C, ambient temperature and 37°C, the cellulase preparation was found to retain 100, 75 and 60% of its initial activity, respectively.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 131-135 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Cheese ; Starters ; Production ; Alignate
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Calcium alginate beads containingLactococcus lactis cells were used for three batch fermentations of milk or a commercially available growth medium (Gold Complete, Nordica) with the aim of producing concentrated cultures. Repeated fermentations did not significantly increase bead CFU counts which were between 3.3–7.8×1010 CFU/g. During the second and third fermentations, which lasted 6 h each, the bead populations decreased if the incubation was extended over 2 h. There was cell release from the beads. Fermentation media and fermentation time all had an effect on free cell counts, but none of these factors statistically interacted. Free cell counts were higher at the end of fermentations 2 and 3 than in the first fermentation and approximately 50% of the population was in the free state. Free cell counts were higher when the beads were incubated in Gold complete than in milk. Although the total bacterial population of a standard free cell fermentation was always higher than those having immobilized cells, immobilized cell technology did enable the production of dense cultures.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 247-250 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Fructosyl-transferring enzyme ; 1-Kestose ; Fructo-oligosaccharide ; Continuous production
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary β-Fructofuranosidase P-1 fromAureobasidium sp. ATCC 20524, which produces a fructo-oligosaccharide (1-kestose) from sucrose, was immobilized covalently onto alkylamine porous silica with glutaraldehyde at high efficiency (44.4%). Optimum pore diameter of porous silica for immobilization of the enzyme was 91.7 nm. The enzymatic profiles of immobilized enzyme were almost identical to the native one except its stabilities to temperature and metal ions were improved. 1-Kestose was produced continuously and selectively from 40% (w/v) sucrose at fast flow rates by a column packed with the immobilized enzyme for up to 26 days, and the effluent concentration of 1-kestose remained in the range 113–135 mg ml−1.
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    Journal of industrial microbiology and biotechnology 9 (1992), S. 257-260 
    ISSN: 1476-5535
    Keywords: Polysaccharide ; Fructan ; Gum ; Fermentation ; Bacillus polymyxa ; Sweetener
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    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Summary Bacillus polymyxa (NRRL-18475) produced a levan-type fructan (B, 2→6 fructofuranoside) when grown on sucrose, sugarcane juice, and sugarbeet molasses. The organism converted about 46% of the fructose moiety of sucrose to levan when grown on sucrose medium, however, the yields of levan from sugarcane juice and beet molasses were much less than sucrose solution. Such sugarcane juice and beet molasses can be made a good substrate for levan production by various modifications. Adding peptone to sugarcane juice or passing beet molasses through a column of gel filtration media improved levan yield to a level almost comparable to that obtained from sucrose.
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 891-918 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract We present an algorithm for allocating individual ants to tasks that relies solely on task change being caused by the unavailability of work. We prove that such an algorithm will allocate the correct number of individuals to each job. Furthermore, we can demonstrate that if such an algorithm is used then an age structure emerges over the ants performing the various tasks. This matches closely with the weak temporal structure over tasks that is observed in Sendova-Franks and Franks (1993. Division of labour in ants nests within highly variable environments. (A study of temporal polyethism: experimental).Bull. math. Biol. 55, 75–96).
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 1013-1024 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
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    Bulletin of mathematical biology 55 (1993), S. 973-991 
    ISSN: 1522-9602
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    Topics: Biology , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract Biological regulatory systems can be described in terms of non-linear differential equations or in logical terms (using an “infinitely non-linear” approximation). Until recently, only part of the steady states of a system could be identified on logical grounds. The reason was that steady states frequently have one or more variable located on a threshold (see below); those steady states were not detected because so far no logical status was assigned to threshold values. This is why we introduced logical scales with values 0,1θ, 12θ, 2, ..., in which1θ,2θ, ... are the logical values assigned to the successive thresholds of the scale. We thus have, in addition to the regular logical states,singular states in which one or more variables is located on a threshold. This permits identifyingall the steady states on logical grounds. It was noticed that each feedback loop (or reunion of disjointed loops) can be characterized by a logical state located at the thresholds at which the variables of the loop operate. This led to the concept ofloop-characteristic state, which, as we will see, enormously simplifies the analysis.The core of this paper is a formal demonstration that among the singular states of a system, only loop-characteristic states can be steady. Reciprocally, given a loop-characteristic state, there are parameter values for which this state is steady; in this case, the loop is effective (i.e. it generates multistationarity if it is a positive loop, homeostasis if it is a negative loop). This not only results in the above-mentioned radical simplification of the identification of the steady states, but in an entirely new view of the relation between feedback loops and steady states.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 489-492 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In this short note, we establish a simple, yet precise, necessary and sufficient condition for the “right coprime factorization” of a nonlinear feedback control system. As a consequence, we also obtain similar conditions for the “stable right coprime factorizations ” of the nonlinear feedback control system.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 557-566 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract The pseudorandom sequence of arrays (PRSA) and a method to generate it was reported earlier by the authors. This paper presents another method to generate a PRSA. The mathematical recursion describing the PRSA and some of its properties are discussed.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 3-4 
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 5-6 
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 11 (1992), S. 431-439 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract An efficient design of digital differentiators (DD), with a variable frequency range of operation at low and midband frequencies, has been proposed. Implemented as a Taylor structure, a DD designed for orderN can be made to function as a universal configuration giving optimal transfer functions for all possible ordersN, without changing the coefficients.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 37-49 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract This paper proposes an effective method to improve the digital redesign method via the block-pulse function approach. The coefficients of the block-pulse function expansion are exactly evaluated such that the desired digitally redesigned feedback gain and forward gain will be obtained. A numerical example is given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 51-60 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we apply the technique of interval analysis to get bounds on the initial value response of a linearized single machine infinite bus problem when a parameter is varied. It is generally believed that responses for parameter variations in an interval should lie within the responses for the extremums of the parameter variations. This is not generally true and our example demonstrates this. The interval-analysis technique permits getting the overall bound on the response. Further experimentation also revealed that the method has some limitations particularly involving lightly damped long-term dynamics. The technique is useful in finding the robustness of a particular design such as the power system stabilizer for parameter variations.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 105-117 
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    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract The high-order Yule-Walker (HOYW) method of sinusoidal frequency estimation based on a singular value decomposition (SVD) is known to have excellent statistical performance. Here, we show that the SVD-based step of the HOYW method can be replaced by a computationally more convenient QR decomposition (QRD)-based step, without affecting the asymptotic properties of the frequency estimates.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 85-103 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract For the given observations set of the ARMA (autoregressive moving average) process, the likelihood function depends, not only on model parameters, but on the starting values of the input and output. Therefore, it is called theconditional likelihood function. Theunconditional likelihood function can be obtained in two ways. The first is to set the starting values to zero, as is often done, and the second is to set them to the properly estimated values. The difference between these two types of likelihood functions is significant when the given data sequence is short, and any of the zeros of the moving average part is close to the boundary of the unit circle. In this paper the direct method of starting value estimation and its application to two off-line ARMA estimation algorithms, the maximum likelihood (ML) algorithm and the iterative inverse filtering (ITIF) algorithm, is proposed. Experimental results prove both increased efficiency and stability of these algorithms. The importance of setting the starting values properly is also significant when the recursive algorithm, with previously estimated parameters, has to be restarted. The advantage of the proposed reinitialization method is shown on the recursive lattice algorithm working in the block mode.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 151-151 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
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  • 96
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 133-149 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In this paper we consider nonlinear, infinite networks of purely resistive type where the voltage across a branch of the network is proportional to a fixed power of the current flowing in the branch. It is known that the study of currents in such networks amounts to studying the space of the functions on a network which have finite Dirichlet sums of orderp. Such a study was carried out in [7], [9], and [11]–[14] under the assumption that every node is connected to only finitely many different nodes of the network. In this paper we drop this assumption and work with general countable networks. We prove that most results of the locally finite case, and especially the classification theory, hold true in a more general context. Moreover, we give necessary and sufficient conditions for a network to have only constant Dirichlet finitep-harmonic functions. The relationship with discrete Markov processes is also pointed out.
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  • 97
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 155-175 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract One of the major drawbacks of the backpropagation algorithm is its slow rate of convergence. Researchers have tried several different approaches to speed up the convergence of backpropagation learning. In this paper, we present those rapid learning methods as three categories, and implement the representative methods of each category: (1) for the numerical method based approach, the Aitken's Δ2 process, (2) for the heuristics based approach, the dynamic adaptation of learning rate, and (3) for the learning strategy based approach, the selective presentation of learning samples. Based on these implementations, the performance is evaluated with experiments and the merits and demerits are briefly discussed.
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  • 98
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 177-210 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract The area of artificial neural networks has recently seen an explosion of theoretical and practical results. In this paper, we present an artificial neural network that is algebraically distinct from the classical artificial neural networks, and several applications which are different from the typical ones. In fact, this new class of networks, calledmorphology neural networks, is a special case of a general theory of artificial neural nets, which includes the classical neural nets. The main difference between a classical neural net and a morphology neural net lies in the way each node algebraically combines the numerical information. Each node in a classical neural net combines information by multiplying output values and corresponding weights and summing, while in a morphology neural net, the combining operation consists of adding values and corresponding weights, and taking the maximum value. We lay a theoretical foundation for morphology neural nets, describe their roots, and give several applications in image processing. In addition, theoretical results on the convergence issues for two networks are presented.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 309-329 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract Higher order moment computations are generally necessary wherever the recognition task exceeds the confines of linearity. This paper provides an overview of recent progress on a specific neural network design, which explicitly uses higher order moment information. Attention is focused on the training algorithms used in the design and on network performance in prototype applications.
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    Circuits, systems and signal processing 12 (1993), S. 375-390 
    ISSN: 1531-5878
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: Abstract In the present paper we study the problem of the existence and uniqueness of solutions of implicit systems considered on a finite interval of time. We consider two kinds of existence problems: input-acceptance and input-acceptance when the boundary conditions of a corresponding trajectory are set to zero, and two kinds of uniqueness problems: output uniqueness and output uniqueness when the boundary conditions of the corresponding trajectory are unknown. Geometric conditions for all of these notions are given, and the duality of these notions is studied.
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