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Fractional calculus and memory in biophysical time series. (English) Zbl 1134.92308

Losa, Gabriele A. (ed.) et al., Fractals in biology and medicine. Vol. 3. 3rd international symposium, Centro Seminariale Monte Verità, Ascona, Switzerland, March 8–11, 2000. Basel: Birkhäuser (ISBN 3-7643-6474-2). 221-234 (2002).
Summary: The simplest and probably the most familiar model of statistical processes in the physical sciences is the random walk. This model has been applied to all manner of biophysical phenomena, ranging from DNA sequences to the firing of neurons. We extend the random walk model to include long-time memory in the dynamics and find that this gives rise to a fractional-difference stochastic process. The continuum limit of this latter random walk is a fractional Langevin equation, that is, a fractional differential equation driven by random fluctuations. We show that the index of the inverse power-law spectrum in many biophysical processes can be related to the order of the fractional derivative in the fractional Langevin equation. This fractional stochastic model suggests that a scale-free process guides the dynamics of many complex biophysical phenomena.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 0997.00037].

MSC:

92C05 Biophysics
60G50 Sums of independent random variables; random walks
60G35 Signal detection and filtering (aspects of stochastic processes)