1 / 47

Feed Sideward Applications to Biological Biomedical Systems Session 2

Jim HolteUniversity of Minnesota. 2. 2/7/02. Sessions. Session 1 - Feed Sideward Concepts and Examples, 1/15Session 2 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological

penn
Télécharger la présentation

Feed Sideward Applications to Biological Biomedical Systems Session 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 1 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological & Biomedical Systems Session 2 Jim Holte 2/7/2002

    2. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 2 2/7/02 Sessions Session 1 - Feed Sideward Concepts and Examples, 1/15 Session 2 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological & Biomedical Systems, 2/7 Session 3 Chronobiology, 2/21 ? Franz Hallberg and Germaine Cornelissen

    3. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 3 2/7/02 Biomedical Devices Pacemakers - Companies are introducing circadian rhythm based pacemakers. The pacing strategy (amplitude & timing of pacing stimulus) for effective cardiac capture depends on the time of day. (eg. work & sleep). Drug Delivery - Medtronic/Minimeds insulin pump has a drug delivery strategy. It is preprogrammed for continuous insulin delivery which depends on exercise, food intake, patient endogenous performance, may now use adjustment of dose as a function of time of day.

    4. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 4 2/7/02 Summary Dynamical systems analysis provides a technique for designing rate-control biomedical devices for therapeutic diagnosis & intervention. Rate-control provides direct access to bio-rhythms. Rate control techniques can apply the extensive knowledge of heart rate variability without requiring knowledge of the causes. The above builds on the extensive modeling of controllability and extensibility - opaque-box techniques.

    5. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 5 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Terms Simple Example Feed Back Reinvesting dividends Feed Foreward Setting money aside Feed Sideward Moving money to another account

    6. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 6 2/7/02 Introduction Feed Sideward is a coupling that shifts resources from one subsystem to another Feed Sideward #1 feeds values of other variables into the specified variable Feed Sideward #2 feeds changes of parameters into the specified variable. (time varying parameters) Feed Sideward #3 feeds changes of topology by switch operations (switched systems) Tool for global analysis especially useful for biological systems

    7. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 7 2/7/02 References Colin Pittendrigh & VC Bruce, An Oscillator Model for Biological Clocks, in Rhythmic and Synthetic Processes in Growth, Princeton, 1957. Theodosios Pavlidis, Biological Oscillators: Their mathematical analysis, Princeton, 1973, Chapter 5, Dynamics of Circadian Oscillators J.D. Murray, Mathematical Biology, Springer-Verlag, 1993, Chapter 8 Perturbed and Coupled Oscillators Arthur Winfree, The Timing of Biological Clocks, Scientific American Books, 1987

    8. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 8 2/7/02 Inherent Biological Rhythms Biosystems Rhythms second cycles (sec) - cardiac circadian (day) - sleep cycle) - melatonin (pineal) circaseptan (week) - mitotic activity of human bone marrow, balneology, bilirubin cycle neonatology circalunar cycles (month) - menstrual cycle annual (year) cycles - animals coats weight loss & gain by the season.

    9. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 9 2/7/02 Synchronizers Exogenous (external) stimulated by light, temperature & sleep/wake, barometric pressure & headaches/joint aches, Endogenous (internal): heart rates escape beats preventricular contractions - ectopic beats Sino-atreal node (associations of myocardial fibers on basis of enervation by vagus nerve) SA node beats spontaneously, governed by nerve & chemical, SA node stimulates the AV node providing a time delay. AV node sends excitation through conduction system to the purkinje fibers which stimulate the heart walls to contract. EEG rhythms (4-30 Hz, alpha, beta, theta & delta)

    10. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 10 2/7/02 Mathematics Mathematical linkage to synchronizers Endogenous rhythms refer to the eigenvectors. Exogenous rhythms refer to the particular integrals (forcing function). dX/dt = AX +B, B provides a forcing function. AX provides the eigenvectors.

    11. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 11 2/7/02 Viewpoint Challenge Traditional view biological rhythms are exogenous Focus on particular integrals (heterogenous eqn, x=ax+b) Blood pressure variation is interpreted as an activity variation, thus external. Now, many claim that biological rhythms are endogenous Focus on eigenvectors (homogeneous eqn, x=ax). Chronobiology viewpoint Blood pressure variation is interpreted as a hormonal variation, thus internal.

    12. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 12 2/7/02 Nollte Model Variation of Pavlidis, Eqns 5.4.1 & 5.4.2 Dynamical System r=r-cs+b, r>=0 s=r-as s>=0 r is heart rate, r is dr/dt s is blood pressure, s is ds/dt b is ambient temperature * Coupling* Coupling

    13. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 13 2/7/02 Dynamical System Circuit Map

    14. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 14 2/7/02 Limit Cycle Limit Cycle, Limit Cycle,

    15. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 15 2/7/02 Effect of Increased Heart Rate Stable limit cycle Stable limit cycle

    16. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 16 2/7/02 Effect of Decreased Heart Rate Stability Stability

    17. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 17 2/7/02 Effect of Critical Heart Rate & Pressure Equilibrium point Unstable - Eigenvalues have positive real partEquilibrium point Unstable - Eigenvalues have positive real part

    18. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 18 2/7/02 Effect of Perturbed Equilibrium Reduce sReduce s

    19. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 19 2/7/02 Biomedical Devices Pacemakers - Companies are introducing circadian rhythm based pacemakers. The pacing strategy (amplitude & timing of pacing stimulus) for effective cardiac capture depends on the time of day. (eg. work & sleep). Drug Delivery - Medtronic/Minimeds insulin pump has a drug delivery strategy. It is preprogrammed for continuous insulin delivery which depends on exercise, food intake, patient endogenous performance, may now use adjustment of dose as a function of time of day.

    20. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 20 2/7/02 Summary Dynamical systems analysis provides a technique for designing rate-control biomedical devices for therapeutic diagnosis & intervention. Rate-control provides direct access to bio-rhythms. Rate control techniques can apply the extensive knowledge of heart rate variability without requiring knowledge of the causes. The above builds on the extensive modeling of controllability and extensibility - opaque-box techniques.

    21. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 21 2/7/02 Next Session Session 1 - Feed Sideward Concepts and Examples, 1/15 Session 2 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological & Biomedical Systems, 2/7 Session 3 Chronobiology, 2/21 ? Franz Hallberg and Germaine Cornelissen

    22. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 22 2/7/02

    23. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 23 2/7/02 Backup

    24. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 24 2/7/02 Solution

    25. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 25 2/7/02 Nollte Model: Continuous Extension

    26. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 26 2/7/02 ODE Architect Models

    27. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 27 2/7/02 References Colin Pittendrigh & VC Bruce, An Oscillator Model for Biological Clocks, in Rhythmic and Synthetic Processes in Growth, Princeton, 1957. Theodosios Pavlidis, Biological Oscillators: Their mathematical analysis, Princeton, 1973, Chapter 5, Dynamics of Circadian Oscillators J.D. Murray, Mathematical Biology, Springer-Verlag, 1993, Chapter 8 Perturbed and Coupled Oscillators Arthur Winfree, The Temporal Morphology of a Biological Clock, Amer Math Soc, Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences, Gerstenhaber, 1970, p 111-150 Arthur Winfree, Integrated View of Resetting a Circadian Clock, Journ Theoretical Biology, Vol 28, pp 327-374, 1970 Arthur Winfree, The Timing of Biological Clocks, Scientific American Books, 1987

    28. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 28 2/7/02 Feed Sideward - Topics (60 min) Session 1 (14 slides) Background Concepts & Examples Phase Space (1 slide) Singularities (2 slides) * Coupled Oscillators (2 slides) Phase Resetting (2 slides) * Oscillator Entrainment (1 slide) Feed Sideward as modulation (3 slides) ** Summary (1 slide)

    29. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 29 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Understanding Biological Rhythms Session 1 Jim Holte 1/15/2002

    30. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 30 2/7/02 Sessions Session 1 - Feed Sideward Concepts and Examples, 1/15 Session 2 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological & Biomedical Systems, 1/31 Session 3 Chronobiology, 2/12 Franz Hallberg and Germaine Cornalissen

    31. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 31 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Terms Simple Example Feed Back Reinvesting dividends Feed Foreward Setting money aside Feed Sideward Moving money to another account

    32. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 32 2/7/02 Introduction Feed Sideward is a coupling that shifts resources from one subsystem to another Feed Sideward #1 feeds values of other variables into the specified variable Feed Sideward #2 feeds changes of parameters into the specified variable. (time varying parameters) Feed Sideward #3 feeds changes of topology by switch operations (switched systems) Tool for global analysis especially useful for biological systems

    33. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 33 2/7/02 Phase Space Laws of the physical world Ordinary differential equations Visualization of Solutions Understanding

    34. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 34 2/7/02 Phase Space The Lotka-Volterra Equations for Predator-Prey Systems H' = b*H - a*H*P P' = -d*P + c*H*P H = prey abundance, P = predator Set the parameters b = 2 growth coefficient of prey d = 1 growth coefficient of predators a = 1 rate of capture of prey per predator per unit time c = 1 rate of "conversion" of prey to predators per unit time per predator.

    35. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 35 2/7/02 Phase Space

    36. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 36 2/7/02 Coupled Oscillators Model x and y represent the "phases of two oscillators. Think of x and y: angular positions of two "particles" moving around the unit circle a1 = 0 x has constant angular rate a2 = 0 y has constant angular rate. Coupling when a1 or a2 non-zero

    37. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 37 2/7/02 Example Uncoupled Oscillators

    38. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 38 2/7/02 Example Coupled Oscillators

    39. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 39 2/7/02 Phase Resetting

    40. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 40 2/7/02 Example Phase Resetting

    41. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 41 2/7/02 Oscillator Entrainment

    42. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 42 2/7/02 Oscillator Entrainment Example

    43. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 43 2/7/02 Singularities

    44. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 44 2/7/02 Example - Singularities

    45. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 45 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Terms Simple Example Feed Back Reinvesting dividends Feed Foreward Setting money aside Feed Sideward Moving money to another account

    46. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 46 2/7/02 Feed Sideward Example

    47. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 47 2/7/02 Summary Feed Sideward is a coupling that shifts resources from one subsystem to another Feed Sideward #1 feeds values of other variables into the specified variable Feed Sideward #2 feeds changes of parameters into the specified variable. (time varying parameters) Feed Sideward #3 feeds changes of topology by switch operations (switched systems) Tool for global analysis especially useful for biological systems

    48. Jim Holte University of Minnesota 48 2/7/02 Next Session Session 1 - Feed Sideward Concepts and Examples, 1/15 Session 2 Feed Sideward Applications to Biological & Biomedical Systems, 1/31 Session 3 Chronobiology, 2/12 Franz Hallberg and Germaine Cornelissen

More Related