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Applied Colloquium

The Mechanics of Tissue Dynamics
Sharon R. Lubkin
Department of Biomedical Engineering, North Carolina State University
Friday, 23 October 2009
4:00 PM
Math 501

Tissues grow, change shape, and differentiate, function normally or abnormally, get diseased or injured, repair themselves, and sometimes atrophy. This complex suite of behaviors is governed by a complex suite of controls. Nonetheless, we can identify some general principles at work in the dynamics of tissues. Our goal is to understand how a tissues mechanics and biology regulate each other.

Our models use a biologically based continuum framework to track the mechanics, biology, and mechanobiology of the component cells, fluids, signaling molecules, and extracellular matrix materials. The presentation will describe our modeling approach, reveal some of the general principles we have identified, and discuss some of the questions our findings have raised about specific morphogenetic systems.

Refreshments at 3:30 PM in Math 401N.
Event submitted 25 Aug 2009 by Anne Keyl.