There is a growing interest in mathematical mechanistic modelling as a promising strategy for understanding tumour progression. This approach is accompanied by a methodological change of making research, in which models help to actively generate hypotheses instead of waiting for general principles to become apparent once sufficient data are accumulated. This paper applies recent research from philosophy of science to uncover three important problems of mechanistic modelling which may compromise its mainstream application, namely: the dilemma of formal and informal descriptions, the need to express degrees of confidence and the need of an argumentation framework. We report experience and research on similar problems from software engineering...
Mathematical models have been used to describe almost every aspect of cancer, from its inception to ...
Cancer is one of the major causes of death in the world (particularly the developed world), with aro...
This Timeline article charts progress in mathematical modelling of cancer over the past 50 years, hi...
There is a growing interest in mathematical mechanistic modelling as a promising strategy for unders...
To develop the path that goes from the clinical experience to the laboratories and back to the clini...
Our strategies for the treatment of cancer are constrained by our incomplete understanding of tumour...
According to a widely held view, scientific modelling consists in entertaining a set of model descri...
In the last few decades, philosophy of science has increasingly focused on multilevel models and cau...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
We discuss philosophical, methodological, and biomedical grounds for the traditional paradigm of can...
Many scientific disciplines rely on the construction and use of models: biomedical sciences are no e...
Mathematical models have been used to describe almost every aspect of cancer, from its inception to ...
While there have been enormous advances in our understanding of the genetic drivers and molecular pa...
Mathematical models have been used to describe almost every aspect of cancer, from its inception to ...
Cancer is one of the major causes of death in the world (particularly the developed world), with aro...
This Timeline article charts progress in mathematical modelling of cancer over the past 50 years, hi...
There is a growing interest in mathematical mechanistic modelling as a promising strategy for unders...
To develop the path that goes from the clinical experience to the laboratories and back to the clini...
Our strategies for the treatment of cancer are constrained by our incomplete understanding of tumour...
According to a widely held view, scientific modelling consists in entertaining a set of model descri...
In the last few decades, philosophy of science has increasingly focused on multilevel models and cau...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
When dealing with the biophysics of tumors, analytical and numerical modeling tools have long been r...
We discuss philosophical, methodological, and biomedical grounds for the traditional paradigm of can...
Many scientific disciplines rely on the construction and use of models: biomedical sciences are no e...
Mathematical models have been used to describe almost every aspect of cancer, from its inception to ...
While there have been enormous advances in our understanding of the genetic drivers and molecular pa...
Mathematical models have been used to describe almost every aspect of cancer, from its inception to ...
Cancer is one of the major causes of death in the world (particularly the developed world), with aro...
This Timeline article charts progress in mathematical modelling of cancer over the past 50 years, hi...