Biocomplexity

Biocomplexity is the study of complex structures and behaviors that arise from nonlinear interactions of active biological agents, which may range in scale from molecules to cells to organisms. Almost every biological system exhibits complexity - emergent properties where the ensemble possesses capabilities that its individual agents lack. Classical examples of biocomplexity include the behavior of molecular motors during DNA transcription, genetic and metabolic networks within cells, the interacting filaments of the cytoskeleton, which allow the cell to move, the differentiation, organization and movement of cells during embryonic development, the function of the networks of neurons which compose the brain and the schooling of fish or birds.

Biocomplexity spiral

Primarily as a result of funding policy changes at the American National Science Foundation around 2000, some researchers have begun to use the term biocomplexity in a narrower sense to denote the complex behavioral, biological, social, chemical, and physical interactions of living organisms with their environment. This relatively new subfield of biocomplexity encompasses other domains such as biodiversity and ecology.

Biocomplexity research aims to provide quantitative models of complex biological phenomena both to understand them in their own right and to interpret and guide quantitative biomedical experimentation.

Kluwer planned to publish a journal called Biocomplexity. A disappointingly low number of submitted manuscripts resulted in the publisher cancelling the journal's launch issue.

See also

References

    Further reading

    • . Biological Informatics Program of the U.S. Geological Survey. via archive.org
    • "What Exactly is Biocomplexity?". University of Delaware, College of Marine Studies and the Sea Grant College Program. 2003. Archived from the original on 2012-07-22.
    • "The Interdisciplinary Center for the Study of Biocomplexity". University of Notre Dame. Archived from the original on 2012-09-24.
    • "The Biocomplexity Institute". The Trustees of Indiana University.
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