DocumentCode
1209223
Title
Identifiability: Its Role in Design of Pharmacokinetic Experi ments
Author
Brown, Reginald F.
Author_Institution
School of Electrical Engineering, University of New South Wales
Issue
1
fYear
1982
Firstpage
49
Lastpage
54
Abstract
Identifiability analysis is a vital first step in the design of experiments to estimate phannacokinetic parameters; it can be of help in choosing the model structure, the numbers and locations of inputs and outputs, and the input-signal waveforms; it can also be of help in deciding whether certain physical parameters need to be measured directly, and whether the gains of certain measurement transducers need to be calibrated. The effect of such choices and decisions on the identifiability of the model can be tested by standard algebraic procedures. These provide answers to questions of nonexistence of a solution (underidentification), multiple solutions (local identification), and redundant equations (overidentification). The practical implications of identiflability are demonstrated through pharmacokinetic examples, but the results are equally applicable in other fields.
Keywords
Closed-form solution; Drugs; Gain measurement; Kinetic theory; Mathematical model; Nonlinear equations; Packaging; Parameter estimation; Testing; Transducers; Animals; Kinetics; Models, Biological; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Research Design;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1982.324963
Filename
4121313
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