Personal, behavioral and socio-environmental predictors of overweight incidence in young adults: 10-yr longitudinal findings. (73/105)

 (+info)

Meal consumption is ineffective at maintaining or correcting water balance in a desert lizard, Heloderma suspectum. (74/105)

 (+info)

Multivariable adaptive closed-loop control of an artificial pancreas without meal and activity announcement. (75/105)

 (+info)

Model identification using stochastic differential equation grey-box models in diabetes. (76/105)

BACKGROUND: The acceptance of virtual preclinical testing of control algorithms is growing and thus also the need for robust and reliable models. Models based on ordinary differential equations (ODEs) can rarely be validated with standard statistical tools. Stochastic differential equations (SDEs) offer the possibility of building models that can be validated statistically and that are capable of predicting not only a realistic trajectory, but also the uncertainty of the prediction. In an SDE, the prediction error is split into two noise terms. This separation ensures that the errors are uncorrelated and provides the possibility to pinpoint model deficiencies. METHODS: An identifiable model of the glucoregulatory system in a type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) patient is used as the basis for development of a stochastic-differential-equation-based grey-box model (SDE-GB). The parameters are estimated on clinical data from four T1DM patients. The optimal SDE-GB is determined from likelihood-ratio tests. Finally, parameter tracking is used to track the variation in the "time to peak of meal response" parameter. RESULTS: We found that the transformation of the ODE model into an SDE-GB resulted in a significant improvement in the prediction and uncorrelated errors. Tracking of the "peak time of meal absorption" parameter showed that the absorption rate varied according to meal type. CONCLUSION: This study shows the potential of using SDE-GBs in diabetes modeling. Improved model predictions were obtained due to the separation of the prediction error. SDE-GBs offer a solid framework for using statistical tools for model validation and model development.  (+info)

Adolescent dietary patterns in Fiji and their relationships with standardized body mass index. (77/105)

 (+info)

Sequential release of milk protein-derived bioactive peptides in the jejunum in healthy humans. (78/105)

 (+info)

Effects of indigestible carbohydrates in barley on glucose metabolism, appetite and voluntary food intake over 16 h in healthy adults. (79/105)

 (+info)

Specific food structures supress appetite through reduced gastric emptying rate. (80/105)

 (+info)