The brain's waterscape

Marie E. Rognes (Simula)

07-Dec-2020, 14:00-15:00 (3 years ago)

Abstract: Your brain has its own waterscape: whether you are reading or sleeping, fluid flows around or through the brain tissue and clears waste in the process. These physiological processes are crucial for the well-being of the brain. In spite of their importance we understand them but little. Mathematics and numerics could play a crucial role in gaining new insight. Indeed, medical doctors express an urgent need for modeling of water transport through the brain, to overcome limitations in traditional techniques. Surprisingly little attention has been paid to the numerics of the brain’s waterscape however, and fundamental knowledge is missing. In this talk, I will discuss mathematical models and numerical methods for the brain's waterscape across scales - from viewing the brain as a poroelastic medium at the macroscale and zooming in to studying electrical, chemical and mechanical interactions between brain cells at the microscale.

mathematical physicsanalysis of PDEsclassical analysis and ODEsdynamical systemsnumerical analysis

Audience: researchers in the topic


"Partial Differential Equations and Applications" Webinar

Organizers: Habib Ammari, Hyeonbae Kang, Lin Lin, Sid Mishra, Eduardo Teixeira, Zhi-Qiang Wang, Zhitao Zhang, Stanley Snelson
Curator: Jan Holland*
*contact for this listing

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