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Nano Communication Networks, Volume 2
Volume 2, Number 1, March 2011
- Sasitharan Balasubramaniam
, Christof Teuscher, Dmitri Botvich, Adriele Prina-Mello
:
Special Issue on Role of Inter-Disciplinary Research in Nanoscale Communication. 1-3 - Ilona Wegrzyn, Haijiang Zhang, Owe Orwar, Aldo Jesorka:
Nanotube-interconnected liposome networks. 4-15 - Akihiro Enomoto, Michael J. Moore, Tatsuya Suda, Kazuhiro Oiwa
:
Design of self-organizing microtubule networks for molecular communication. 16-24 - Luiz Felipe Cavalcanti Pereira
, Mauro S. Ferreira
:
Electronic transport on carbon nanotube networks: A multiscale computational approach. 25-38 - David K. Karig
, Piro Siuti, Roy D. Dar
, Scott T. Retterer
, Mitchel J. Doktycz, Michael L. Simpson:
Model for biological communication in a nanofabricated cell-mimic driven by stochastic resonance. 39-49 - Julian Holley, Andrew Adamatzky, Larry Bull, Ben de Lacy Costello
, Ishrat Jahan:
Computational modalities of Belousov-Zhabotinsky encapsulated vesicles. 50-61 - Jonathan S. Ellis, Grégoire Herzog, Paul Galvin
:
Towards biomolecule-based information processing using engineered nanopores. 62-73 - Sergi Abadal
, Ian F. Akyildiz:
Automata modeling of Quorum Sensing for nanocommunication networks. 74-83
Volume 2, Numbers 2-3, June - September 2011
- Tadashi Nakano, Junichi Suzuki:
Special Issue on Biological Information and Communication Technology. 85-87 - Wynand Winterbach, Huijuan Wang, Marcel J. T. Reinders, Piet Van Mieghem, Dick de Ridder:
Metabolic network destruction: Relating topology to robustness. 88-98 - Tomohiro Shirakawa, Yukio-Pegio Gunji, Yoshihiro Miyake:
An associative learning experiment using the plasmodium of Physarum polycephalum. 99-105 - Lakshmanan Kuppusamy, Anand Mahendran
, Kamala Krithivasan, Khalid Mohammed:
On the study of ambiguity and the trade-off between measures and ambiguity in insertion-deletion languages. 106-118 - Henry C. Wong, William C. Tang
:
Computational study of local and global ECM degradation and the effects on cell speed and cell-matrix tractions. 119-124 - Dragana Laketic, Gunnar Tufte
:
Autonomous adaptation inspired by the model of a minimal living system provided by chemoton theory. 125-140 - Venkata Padmavati Metta, Kamala Krithivasan, Deepak Garg
:
Modelling and analysis of spiking neural P systems with anti-spikes using Pnet lab. 141-149 - Sasitharan Balasubramaniam
, Noreen T. Boyle, Andrea Della-Chiesa, Frank Walsh, Adil Mardinoglu, Dmitri Botvich, Adriele Prina-Mello
:
Development of artificial neuronal networks for molecular communication. 150-160 - Michael J. Moore, Tadashi Nakano:
Addressing by beacon distances using molecular communication. 161-173
Volume 2, Number 4, December 2011
- Nariman Farsad, Andrew W. Eckford, Satoshi Hiyama, Yuki Moritani:
Quick system design of vesicle-based active transport molecular communication by using a simple transport model. 175-188 - Makoto Naruse
, Kenji Leibnitz, Ferdinand Peper, Naoya Tate, Wataru Nomura, Tadashi Kawazoe, Masayuki Murata
, Motoichi Ohtsu:
Autonomy in excitation transfer via optical near-field interactions and its implications for information networking. 189-195 - Nora Garralda, Ignacio Llatser, Albert Cabellos-Aparicio, Eduard Alarcón, Massimiliano Pierobon
:
Diffusion-based physical channel identification in molecular nanonetworks. 196-204 - Daniele Miorandi:
A stochastic model for molecular communications. 205-212 - Laura Galluccio
, Sergio Palazzo, Giuseppe Enrico Santagati:
Modeling signal propagation in nanomachine-to-neuron communications. 213-222 - Dogu Arifler:
Link layer modeling of bio-inspired communication in nanonetworks. 223-229 - Igor Neri, Flavio Travasso
, Helios Vocca
, Luca Gammaitoni:
Nonlinear noise harvesters for nanosensors. 230-234 - Gonzalo Murillo
, Minbaek Lee, Chen Xu, Gabriel Abadal, Zhong Lin Wang
:
Hybrid resonant energy harvester integrating ZnO NWs with MEMS for enabling zero-power wireless sensor nodes. 235-241

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