Selecting a common direction. I: How orientational order can arise from simple contact responses between interacting cells
DOI10.1007/BF00298646zbMATH Open0829.92002MaRDI QIDQ1896599FDOQ1896599
Authors: Leah Edelstein-Keshet, A. Mogilner
Publication date: 17 January 1996
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
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PDEs in connection with biology, chemistry and other natural sciences (35Q92) Developmental biology, pattern formation (92C15)
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Cited In (22)
- Moran model of spatial alignment in microbial colonies
- Non-local parabolic and hyperbolic models for cell polarisation in heterogeneous cancer cell populations
- Responding to directional cues: a tale of two cells [biochemical signaling pathways]
- Models for contact-mediated pattern formation: Cells that form parallel arrays
- Hyperbolic and kinetic models for self-organized biological aggregations and movement: a brief review
- The effect of a non-uniform turning kernel on ant trail morphology
- Spatio-angular order in populations of self-aligning objects: formation of oriented patches
- On the simultaneous recovery of environmental factors in the 3D chemotaxis-Navier-Stokes models
- An integro-differential equation model for alignment and orientational aggregation
- Mass-Selection in Alignment Models with Non-Deterministic Effects
- Selecting a common direction. II: Peak-like solutions representing total alignment of cell clusters
- On a macroscopic limit of a kinetic model of alignment
- Mathematical modelling of anisotropy in fibrous connective tissue
- Collective behavior of biological aggregations in two dimensions: a nonlocal kinetic model
- A dynamical analysis of the alignment mechanism between two interacting cells
- Modelling the dynamics of F-actin in the cell
- Dynamic formation of oriented patches in chondrocyte cell cultures
- Modelling the compartmentalization of splicing factors
- Modeling alignment and movement of animals and cells
- Waves of alignment in populations of interacting, oriented individuals
- Mathematical modelling of cancer invasion: the multiple roles of TGF-\(\beta\) pathway on tumour proliferation and cell adhesion
- A discrete Boltzmann-type model of swarming
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