DocumentCode
948464
Title
Biological signal conditioning for system identification
Author
Swanson, George D.
Author_Institution
University of Colorado, Denver, CO
Volume
65
Issue
5
fYear
1977
fDate
5/1/1977 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
735
Lastpage
740
Abstract
The use of mathematical models to characterize physiological systems attempts to summarize how a system behaves in terms of its internal structure. Thus the models should be isomorphic to the underlying physiological structure, and the model parameters must be estimated from input-output observations of the system. The model must be identifiable, in the sense that a unique parameter set exists and that parameter set is resolvable in the presence of noise. This paper considers these identifiability issues with specific emphasis on the effect of biological observation noise in degrading the parameter estimation process. It is shown that conditioning the output signal via design of the experimental input can minimize this degradation. These concepts are applied to metabolic and respiratory system studies.
Keywords
Biological system modeling; Degradation; Drugs; Mathematical model; Parameter estimation; Respiratory system; Signal design; Signal processing; Signal resolution; System identification;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1977.10555
Filename
1454824
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