ECTS - Mathematical Models in Biology

Mathematical Models in Biology (MATH670) Course Detail

Course Name Course Code Season Lecture Hours Application Hours Lab Hours Credit ECTS
Mathematical Models in Biology MATH670 Area Elective 3 0 0 3 5
Pre-requisite Course(s)
N/A
Course Language English
Course Type Elective Courses
Course Level Ph.D.
Mode of Delivery Face To Face
Learning and Teaching Strategies Lecture, Discussion.
Course Coordinator
Course Lecturer(s)
Course Assistants
Course Objectives The aim of the course is to describe the application of mathematical theory in difference and differential equations to biological phenomena. No knowledge of biology, and only basic knowledge in calculus, differential equations and linear algebra are required. The use of mathematics in biological sciences will be analyzed by using several mathematical models of biological systems
Course Learning Outcomes The students who succeeded in this course;
  • formulate discrete and differential equation models that represent a range of biological problems
  • understand the mathematical theory of biological system modelled by linear and nonlinear difference equations
  • choose and apply mathematical and computational tools to solve discrete and differential equation models arising in biology
  • analyze biological models and draw conclusions using their understanding of mathematics
  • biyolojik sistemlerdeki matematiksel modelleri anlamak için MATLAB kullanır
Course Content Linear and nonlinear biological models via difference equations; linear and nonlinear biological models via differential equations; special topics in mathematical biology including predator-prey models, SI,SIS,SIR epidemic models, competition models of two and three species, Van Der Pol equation, Hodgkin-Huxley and FitzHugh-Nagumo models.

Weekly Subjects and Releated Preparation Studies

Week Subjects Preparation
1 Linear difference equations: Basic definitions, first order equations, second order and higher-order equations 1-14
2 Linear difference equations: Firs-order linear systems; Leslie’s age-structure model; properties of Leslie matrix 14-28
3 Nonlinear difference equations: Basic definitions; Local stability in first-order equations 36-45
4 Nonlinear difference equations: A discrete-time SIR epidemic model 69-73
5 Biological applications of difference equations: Population models, Nicholson-Bailey model, predatory-prey model 89-96, 99-103
6 Linear ordinary differential equations: Routh-Hurwitz criteria, phase-plane analysis, Gershgorin’s theorem, Pharmacokinetics model 150-152, 157-165
7 Nonlinear ordinary differential equations: Basic definitions, local stability of first-order equations, 177-184
8 Midterm
9 Nonlinear ordinary differential equations: Phase-Line diagram, local stability of first-order systems, 184-191
10 Nonlinear ordinary differential equations: Phase plane analysis, Periodic solutions 191-198
11 Biological applications of differential equations: Predatory-prey model 240-248
12 Biological applications of differential equations: Competitions models for two and three species 248-253
13 Biological applications of differential equations: Epidemic models (SI,SIS,SIR models) 271-279
14 Biological applications of differential equations: Excitable systems (Van Der Pol equation, Hodgkin-Huxley and FitzHugh-Nagumo models) 279-283
15 Review
16 Final

Sources

Course Book 1. L.J.S. Allen, An Introduction to Mathematical Biology, Pearson, 2006
2. J. D. Murray, Mathematical Biology I. An Introduction ,Third Edition, Springer , 2001
3. G. Vries, J. Müller, T. Hillen, B. Schönfisch, M. Lewis, A Course of Mathematical Biology: Quantitative modelling with mathematical and computational methods, SIAM, 2006

Evaluation System

Requirements Number Percentage of Grade
Attendance/Participation - -
Laboratory - -
Application - -
Field Work - -
Special Course Internship - -
Quizzes/Studio Critics - -
Homework Assignments 3 10
Presentation 1 10
Project 1 10
Report - -
Seminar - -
Midterms Exams/Midterms Jury 1 30
Final Exam/Final Jury 1 40
Toplam 7 100
Percentage of Semester Work 60
Percentage of Final Work 40
Total 100

Course Category

Core Courses X
Major Area Courses
Supportive Courses
Media and Managment Skills Courses
Transferable Skill Courses

The Relation Between Course Learning Competencies and Program Qualifications

# Program Qualifications / Competencies Level of Contribution
1 2 3 4 5
1 Ability to carry out advanced research activities, both individual and as a member of a team
2 Ability to evaluate research topics and comment with scientific reasoning
3 Ability to initiate and create new methodologies, implement them on novel research areas and topics
4 Ability to produce experimental and/or analytical data in systematic manner, discuss and evaluate data to lead scintific conclusions
5 Ability to apply scientific philosophy on analysis, modelling and design of engineering systems
6 Ability to synthesis available knowledge on his/her domain to initiate, to carry, complete and present novel research at international level
7 Contribute scientific and technological advancements on engineering domain of his/her interest area
8 Contribute industrial and scientific advancements to improve the society through research activities

ECTS/Workload Table

Activities Number Duration (Hours) Total Workload
Course Hours (Including Exam Week: 16 x Total Hours) 16 3 48
Laboratory
Application
Special Course Internship
Field Work
Study Hours Out of Class 14 3 42
Presentation/Seminar Prepration 1 3 3
Project 1 4 4
Report
Homework Assignments 3 2 6
Quizzes/Studio Critics
Prepration of Midterm Exams/Midterm Jury 1 10 10
Prepration of Final Exams/Final Jury 1 12 12
Total Workload 125