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Maximizing the information content of experiments in systems biology.

by: Juliane Liepe, Sarah Filippi, Michał Komorowski, Michael P. Stumpf
PLoS computational biology, Vol. 9, No. 1. (31 January 2013), e1002888, doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002888  Key: citeulike:11978694

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Abstract

Our understanding of most biological systems is in its infancy. Learning their structure and intricacies is fraught with challenges, and often side-stepped in favour of studying the function of different gene products in isolation from their physiological context. Constructing and inferring global mathematical models from experimental data is, however, central to systems biology. Different experimental setups provide different insights into such systems. Here we show how we can combine concepts from Bayesian inference and information theory in order to identify experiments that maximize the information content of the resulting data. This approach allows us to incorporate preliminary information; it is global and not constrained to some local neighbourhood in parameter space and it readily yields information on parameter robustness and confidence. Here we develop the theoretical framework and apply it to a range of exemplary problems that highlight how we can improve experimental investigations into the structure and dynamics of biological systems and their behavior.


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