Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Wolfgang Alt
-
Abteilung Theoretische Biologie, Universität Bonn, Bonn, Germany
-
Gerhard Hoffmann
-
Zoologisches Institut II, Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (39 papers)
-
-
Introduction
-
- Wolfgang Alt, Gerhard Hoffmann
Pages 1-5
-
Motion of Cell or Body Parts
-
-
Intracellular Structures and Cell Shape
-
- Graham A. Dunn, Alastair F. Brown
Pages 10-34
-
- John M. Lackie, Hansuli Keller
Pages 35-41
-
-
- Jürgen Bereiter-Hahn, Norbert Braun, Monika Vöth
Pages 68-84
-
-
- Dieter G. Weiss, Günther Galfe, Josef Gulden, Dieter Seitz-Tutter, George M. Langford, Albrecht Struppler et al.
Pages 95-116
-
-
Cilia and Flagella
-
-
- Shoji A. Baba, Yoshihiro Mogami, Koichi Nonaka
Pages 145-154
-
-
-
- Yoshihiro Mogami, Hans Machemer
Pages 184-196
-
Motion of Body Parts: Its Generation and Control in Higher Animals
-
-
-
- Wolfram Zarnack, Gabriele Reuse, Thomas Schwenne
Pages 228-238
-
-
Locomotion of Single Organisms
-
Front Matter
Pages 251-251
About this book
" . . . behavior is not, what an organism does itself, but to what we point. Therefore, whether a type of behavior of an organism is adequate as a certain configuration of movements, will depend on the environment in which we de scribe it. " (Humberto Maturana, Francisco Varela: El arbol del conocimiento, 1984) "A thorough analysis of behavior must result in a scheme, that shows all regularities that are to be found between the sensorical input and the motorical output of an animal. This scheme is an abstract representation of the brain. " (Valentin Braitenberg: Gehirngespinste, 1973) During the 70ies, when Biomathematics (beyond Biomedical Statistics and Com puting) became more popular at universities and research institutes, the problems dealt with came mainly from the general fields of 'Population Biology' and 'Complex Systems Analysis' such as epidemics, ecosystems analysis, morphogenesis, genetics, immunology and neurology (see the first series of Springer Lecture Notes in Biomathematics). Since then, the picture has not considerably changed, and it seems that "a thorough analysis of behavior" of single organisms and, moreover, of their mutual interactions, is far from being understood. On the contrary, mathematical modellers and analysts have been well advised to restrict their investigations to specific aspects of 'biological behavior', one of which is 'biological motion'. Until now, only a few Conference Proceedings or Lecture Notes have paid attention to this important aspect, some of the earlier examples being Vol. 24: 'The measurement of biological shape and shape changes' (1978) or Vol.
Editors and Affiliations
-
Abteilung Theoretische Biologie, Universität Bonn, Bonn, Germany
Wolfgang Alt
-
Zoologisches Institut II, Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
Gerhard Hoffmann