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Model Based Analysis of Clonal Developments Allows for Early Detection of Monoclonal Conversion and LeukemiaBaldow, Christoph, Thielecke, Lars, Glauche, Ingmar 28 March 2017 (has links) (PDF)
The availability of several methods to unambiguously mark individual cells has strongly fostered the understanding of clonal developments in hematopoiesis and other stem cell driven regenerative tissues. While cellular barcoding is the method of choice for experimental studies, patients that underwent gene therapy carry a unique insertional mark within the transplanted cells originating from the integration of the retroviral vector. Close monitoring of such patients allows accessing their clonal dynamics, however, the early detection of events that predict monoclonal conversion and potentially the onset of leukemia are beneficial for treatment. We developed a simple mathematical model of a self-stabilizing hematopoietic stem cell population to generate a wide range of possible clonal developments, reproducing typical, experimentally and clinically observed scenarios. We use the resulting model scenarios to suggest and test a set of statistical measures that should allow for an interpretation and classification of relevant clonal dynamics. Apart from the assessment of several established diversity indices we suggest a measure that quantifies the extension to which the increase in the size of one clone is attributed to the total loss in the size of all other clones. By evaluating the change in relative clone sizes between consecutive measurements, the suggested measure, referred to as maximum relative clonal expansion (mRCE), proves to be highly sensitive in the detection of rapidly expanding cell clones prior to their dominant manifestation. This predictive potential places the mRCE as a suitable means for the early recognition of leukemogenesis especially in gene therapy patients that are closely monitored. Our model based approach illustrates how simulation studies can actively support the design and evaluation of preclinical strategies for the analysis and risk evaluation of clonal developments.
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Improving Execution Speed of Models Implemented in NetLogoRailsback, Steven, Ayllón, Daniel, Berger, Uta, Grimm, Volker, Lytinen, Steven, Sheppard, Colin, Thiele, Jan C. 30 March 2017 (has links) (PDF)
NetLogo has become a standard platform for agent-based simulation, yet there appears to be widespread belief that it is not suitable for large and complex models due to slow execution. Our experience does not support that belief. NetLogo programs often do run very slowly when written to minimize code length and maximize clarity, but relatively simple and easily tested changes can almost always produce major increases in execution speed. We recommend a five-step process for quantifying execution speed, identifying slow parts of code, and writing faster code. Avoiding or improving agent filtering statements can often produce dramatic speed improvements. For models with extensive initialization methods, reorganizing the setup procedure can reduce the initialization effort in simulation experiments. Programming the same behavior in a different way can sometimes provide order-of-magnitude speed increases. For models in which most agents do nothing on most time steps, discrete event simulation—facilitated by the time extension to NetLogo—can dramatically increase speed. NetLogo’s BehaviorSpace tool makes it very easy to conduct multiple-model-run experiments in parallel on either desktop or high performance cluster computers, so even quite slow models can be executed thousands of times. NetLogo also is supported by efficient analysis tools, such as BehaviorSearch and RNetLogo, that can reduce the number of model runs and the effort to set them up for (e.g.) parameterization and sensitivity analysis.
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Lehrberichte der Fakultäten zum Studienjahr ... / Technische Universität Dresden24 March 2015 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Lehrberichte der Fakultäten zum Studienjahr ... / Technische Universität Dresden28 October 2016 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Akademische Forschung und universitäre SammlungenKeyserlingk, Linda von 18 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Die zweite Sektion begann am 4. Oktober mit einem einführenden Vortrag von Klaus Mauersberger über die Entwicklung, die Bewahrung und die Spezifik der Sammlungen der TU Dresden. Mauersberger, langjähriger Mitarbeiter am Zentrum für Geschichte der Technikwissenschaften und seit 1993 Leiter der Kustodie der TU Dresden, gab einen Überblick über die Anfänge, die Aufgaben sowie den Umfang und die Diversität der Dresdner Universitätssammlungen. (...)
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Dresdner Transferbrief05 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Thema der Ausgabe 1(2009): Research in Europe – Research for Europe
Transnational and visionary: Today’s information technologies S. 6, 8, 14, 15, 16/17
Material innovations – analysis, development and applications S. 10, 11, 12, 20
Your partner for EU-funding advice, coordination, facilitation S. 4/5, 18/19, 21-23
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HAEC News06 September 2013 (has links)
Newsletter des Sonderforschungsbereichs 912 "Highly Adaptive Energy-Efficient Computing" (HAEC)
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Umwelterklärung / Technische Universität Dresden24 January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Umweltbericht der TU Dresden24 January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Umweltnews25 January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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