TY - JOUR
T1 - How Can We Fully Realize the Potential of Mathematical and Biological Models to Reintegrate Biology?
AU - Dornhaus, Anna
AU - Smith, Brian
AU - Hristova, Kalina
AU - Buckley, Lauren B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - Both mathematical models and biological model systems stand as tractable representations of complex biological systems or behaviors. They facilitate research and provide insights, and they can describe general rules. Models that represent biological processes or formalize general hypotheses are essential to any broad understanding. Mathematical or biological models necessarily omit details of the natural systems and thus may ultimately be incorrect representations. A key challenge is that tractability requires relatively simple models but simplifcation can result in models that are incorrect in their qualitative, broad implications if the abstracted details matter. Our paper discusses this tension, and how we can improve our inferences from models. We advocate for further e?orts dedicated to model development, improvement, and acceptance by the scientifc community, all of which may necessitate a more explicit discussion of the purpose and power of models. We argue that models should play a central role in reintegrating biology as a way to test our integrated understanding of how molecules, cells, organs, organisms, populations, and ecosystems function.
AB - Both mathematical models and biological model systems stand as tractable representations of complex biological systems or behaviors. They facilitate research and provide insights, and they can describe general rules. Models that represent biological processes or formalize general hypotheses are essential to any broad understanding. Mathematical or biological models necessarily omit details of the natural systems and thus may ultimately be incorrect representations. A key challenge is that tractability requires relatively simple models but simplifcation can result in models that are incorrect in their qualitative, broad implications if the abstracted details matter. Our paper discusses this tension, and how we can improve our inferences from models. We advocate for further e?orts dedicated to model development, improvement, and acceptance by the scientifc community, all of which may necessitate a more explicit discussion of the purpose and power of models. We argue that models should play a central role in reintegrating biology as a way to test our integrated understanding of how molecules, cells, organs, organisms, populations, and ecosystems function.
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U2 - 10.1093/icb/icab142
DO - 10.1093/icb/icab142
M3 - Article
C2 - 34160617
AN - SCOPUS:85124434239
SN - 1540-7063
VL - 61
SP - 2244
EP - 2254
JO - Integrative and Comparative Biology
JF - Integrative and Comparative Biology
IS - 6
ER -