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Mathematical Biology seminar

Boyce Griffith
Courant Institute
"Computational methods for modeling cardiac physiology: A parallel and adaptive version of the immersed boundary method, and bidomain simulations of electrical conduction in murine ventricular tissue"
February 11, 2005 3:05pm in LCB 121

During the first portion of this talk, I will discuss a new parallel and adaptive version of the immersed boundary (IB) method. The IB method is both a mathematical formulation and a numerical scheme for problems involving the interaction of a viscous incompressible fluid and a (visco-)elastic structure. The need for parallelism and adaptivity will be motivated by examining the convergence of the IB method for a prototypical fluid-structure interaction problem, namely the interaction of a viscous incompressible fluid and a viscoelastic shell of finite thickness, a case where we observe actual second order convergence rates. To study the role of reduced gap junctional coupling in promoting and maintaining fatal arrhythmias, an experimental murine model has been developed at the NYU School of Medicine with a cardiac-restricted conditional inactivation of the major ventricular gap junction protein (connexin43). In the final portion of my talk, I will briefly present some recent simulations that begin to explore the effect on propagation of reduced intracellular conductivities in two- and three-dimensional bidomain models of mouse ventricular tissue.



For more information contact J. Keener, 1-6089

E-mail: keener@math.utah.edu