Pages that link to "Item:Q701670"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to Reaction-diffusion models for biological pattern formation (Q701670):
Displaying 18 items.
- Spongiosa primary development: a biochemical hypothesis by Turing patterns formations (Q454735) (← links)
- Asymptotic profile of species migrating on a growing habitat (Q645019) (← links)
- An ADI extrapolated Crank-Nicolson orthogonal spline collocation method for nonlinear reaction-diffusion systems on evolving domains (Q729277) (← links)
- Global dynamics and robustness of reversible autocatalytic reaction-diffusion systems (Q765235) (← links)
- From microscopic to macroscopic descriptions of cell migration on growing domains (Q977683) (← links)
- Mathematical biology. Vol. 2: Spatial models and biomedical applications. (Q1601923) (← links)
- The existence and stability of spike equilibria in the one-dimensional Gray-Scott model: the pulse-splitting regime (Q1779769) (← links)
- Appearance and formation of seed and pericarp May be explained by a reaction-diffusion mechanism? A mathematical modeling (Q1931008) (← links)
- Exponential integrator methods for systems of non-linear space-fractional models with super-diffusion processes in pattern formation (Q2001321) (← links)
- Boundary conditions cause different generic bifurcation structures in Turing systems (Q2168350) (← links)
- Kinetic-fluid derivation and mathematical analysis of a nonlocal cross-diffusion-fluid system (Q2174705) (← links)
- A nonoscillatory second-order time-stepping procedure for reaction-diffusion equations (Q2179158) (← links)
- Turing conditions for pattern forming systems on evolving manifolds (Q2223250) (← links)
- An ADI extrapolated Crank-Nicolson orthogonal spline collocation method for nonlinear reaction-diffusion systems (Q2446950) (← links)
- Discrete and continuous models for tissue growth and shrinkage (Q2632789) (← links)
- Influence of curvature, growth, and anisotropy on the evolution of Turing patterns on growing manifolds (Q2633573) (← links)
- ASYMPTOTIC DYNAMICS OF A NEW MECHANOCHEMICAL MODEL IN BIOLOGICAL PATTERNS (Q5015451) (← links)
- Bat motion can be described by leap frogging (Q6183185) (← links)