Background: Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are common in computational systems biology, especially in the realm of cellular signaling. The development of families of such models, either by a single research group or by different groups working within the same area, presents significant challenges that range from identifying structural similarities and differences between models to understanding how these differences affect system dynamics.Results: We present the development and features of an interactive model exploration system, MOSBIE, which provides utilities for identifying similarities and differences between models within a family. Models are clustered using a custom similarity metric, ...
Rule-based modeling (RBM) is a powerful and increasingly popular approach to modeling cell signaling...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...
Background\ud Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are co...
Background\ud Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are co...
Background: Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are comm...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
A central claim of computational systems biology is that, by drawing on mathematical approaches deve...
The complexities of biological simulation present difficulties with modeling and experimenting. Simu...
Rule-based modeling has become a powerful approach for modeling intracellular networks, which are ch...
Rule-based modeling (RBM) is a powerful and increasingly popular approach to modeling cell signaling...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...
Background\ud Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are co...
Background\ud Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are co...
Background: Mechanistic models that describe the dynamical behaviors of biochemical systems are comm...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
We have witnessed an explosive growth in research involving mathematical models and computer simula...
A central claim of computational systems biology is that, by drawing on mathematical approaches deve...
The complexities of biological simulation present difficulties with modeling and experimenting. Simu...
Rule-based modeling has become a powerful approach for modeling intracellular networks, which are ch...
Rule-based modeling (RBM) is a powerful and increasingly popular approach to modeling cell signaling...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...
'What is in a model?' is a question that any systems modeler has asked at least once when working wi...