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This book gives a comprehensive treatment of the fundamental
necessary and sufficient conditions for optimality for
finite-dimensional, deterministic, optimal control problems. The
emphasis is on the geometric aspects of the theory and on
illustrating how these methods can be used to solve optimal control
problems. It provides tools and techniques that go well beyond
standard procedures and can be used to obtain a full understanding
of the global structure of solutions for the underlying problem.
The text includes a large number and variety of fully worked out
examples that range from the classical problem of minimum surfaces
of revolution to cancer treatment for novel therapy approaches. All
these examples, in one way or the other, illustrate the power of
geometric techniques and methods. The versatile text contains
material on different levels ranging from the introductory and
elementary to the advanced. Parts of the text can be viewed as a
comprehensive textbook for both advanced undergraduate and all
level graduate courses on optimal control in both mathematics and
engineering departments. The text moves smoothly from the more
introductory topics to those parts that are in a monograph style
were advanced topics are presented. While the presentation is
mathematically rigorous, it is carried out in a tutorial style that
makes the text accessible to a wide audience of researchers and
students from various fields, including the mathematical sciences
and engineering. Heinz Schattler is an Associate Professor at
Washington University in St. Louis in the Department of Electrical
and Systems Engineering, Urszula Ledzewicz is a Distinguished
Research Professor at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville in
the Department of Mathematics and Statistics.
This book gives a comprehensive treatment of the fundamental
necessary and sufficient conditions for optimality for
finite-dimensional, deterministic, optimal control problems. The
emphasis is on the geometric aspects of the theory and on
illustrating how these methods can be used to solve optimal control
problems. It provides tools and techniques that go well beyond
standard procedures and can be used to obtain a full understanding
of the global structure of solutions for the underlying problem.
The text includes a large number and variety of fully worked out
examples that range from the classical problem of minimum surfaces
of revolution to cancer treatment for novel therapy approaches. All
these examples, in one way or the other, illustrate the power of
geometric techniques and methods. The versatile text contains
material on different levels ranging from the introductory and
elementary to the advanced. Parts of the text can be viewed as a
comprehensive textbook for both advanced undergraduate and all
level graduate courses on optimal control in both mathematics and
engineering departments. The text moves smoothly from the more
introductory topics to those parts that are in a monograph style
were advanced topics are presented. While the presentation is
mathematically rigorous, it is carried out in a tutorial style that
makes the text accessible to a wide audience of researchers and
students from various fields, including the mathematical sciences
and engineering. Heinz Schattler is an Associate Professor at
Washington University in St. Louis in the Department of Electrical
and Systems Engineering, Urszula Ledzewicz is a Distinguished
Research Professor at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville in
the Department of Mathematics and Statistics.
Mathematical biomedicine is a rapidly developing interdisciplinary
field of research that connects the natural and exact sciences in
an attempt to respond to the modeling and simulation challenges
raised by biology and medicine. There exist a large number of
mathematical methods and procedures that can be brought in to meet
these challenges and this book presents a palette of such tools
ranging from discrete cellular automata to cell population based
models described by ordinary differential equations to nonlinear
partial differential equations representing complex time- and
space-dependent continuous processes. Both stochastic and
deterministic methods are employed to analyze biological phenomena
in various temporal and spatial settings. This book illustrates the
breadth and depth of research opportunities that exist in the
general field of mathematical biomedicine by highlighting some of
the fascinating interactions that continue to develop between the
mathematical and biomedical sciences. It consists of five parts
that can be read independently, but are arranged to give the reader
a broader picture of specific research topics and the mathematical
tools that are being applied in its modeling and analysis. The main
areas covered include immune system modeling, blood vessel
dynamics, cancer modeling and treatment, and epidemiology. The
chapters address topics that are at the forefront of current
biomedical research such as cancer stem cells, immunodominance and
viral epitopes, aggressive forms of brain cancer, or gene therapy.
The presentations highlight how mathematical modeling can enhance
biomedical understanding and will be of interest to both the
mathematical and the biomedical communities including researchers
already working in the field as well as those who might consider
entering it. Much of the material is presented in a way that gives
graduate students and young researchers a starting point for their
own work.
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