lionden.com
Contact
Dr. Patton

  

M i n i    L e s s o n

      Back
Search
Lion Den
Up
Fractal Body 
Related Links

Chaos
Chaos and the Human Body

Lion Tracks

Lion Den -> Anatomy & Physiology -> Course Info -> Mini Lessons -> CHAOS

Key to Hyperlink Symbols

ACT  Interactive
 activity
GA  Gray's Anatomy
ANIM  Animation pp  PowerPoint slide
FIG  Figure term

Define,  pronounce

       

Introduction to scientific chaos

Chaos (as science concept) is "constrained randomness"

bullet

In ordinary conversation "chaos" usually means "total randomness"  or "unpredictability"

bullet

However, in math and science "chaos" means something that LOOKS random or unpredictable but IN REALITY has an underlying order or pattern to it

"Chaos theory" began in 1960, with experiments by (American) Edward Norton Lorenz

bullet

Lorenz was a meteorologist at MIT (now retired) who used only a dozen simple equations in a computer to model a very complex, natural-acting weather system.  This led to many discoveries across science that many "unpredictable" aspects of nature really do have underlying mathematical principles.

 The best introductory book on chaos is Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick

bullet

"     Where chaos begins, classical science stops.  For as long as the world has had physicists inquiring into the laws of nature, it has suffered a special ignorance about disorder in the atmosphere, in the turbulent sea, in the fluctuations of wildlife populations, in the oscillations of the heart and the brain.  The irregular side of nature, the discontinuous and erratic side--these have been puzzles to science, or worse, monstrosities. 
     But in the 1970s a few scientists in the United States and Europe began to find a way through disorder.  They were mathematicians, physicists, biologists, chemists, all seeking connections between different kinds of irregularity.  Physiologists found a surprising order in the chaos that develops in the human heart, the prime cause of sudden, unexplained death.  Ecologists explored the rise and fall of gypsy moth populations.  Economists dug out old stock price data and tried a new kind of analysis.  The insights that emerged led directly into the natural world--the shapes of clouds, the paths of lightning, the microscopic intertwining of blood vessels, the galactic clustering of stars."

Photo from MIT faculty pages http://paoc.mit.edu/paoc/people/person.asp?position=Emeritus&who=lorenzEdward Lorenz
(founder of chaos science)

Click to enlarge

Here's a link to a chaos site produced by high school students
that really explains it all very well:
Chaos Site
  
(not required)

Human function
bullet

Periodic (rhythmic; not chaotic) body functions
bullet

Examples of human functions that vary rhythmically when healthy:
bullet

female reproductive cycle

bullet

sleep cycle

bullet

Aperiodic (nonrhythmic; chaotic) body functions
bullet

Examples of human functions that vary nonrhythmically
bullet

heart rate (HR; beats/min)  (NOTE: this is NOT the same as EKG!!)

bullet

gait (walking pattern)

bullet

Change from chaotic to rhythmic OR change from rhythmic to chaotic
bullet

May be associated with aging, disease, injury

bullet

Heart rate (HR) example:
bullet

When healthy, the HR fluctuates nonrhythmically
bullet

That is, the HR goes up and down, but relatively unpredictably --you don't know exactly what your HR will be in the next moment (even though you may know about what it will be)

bullet

In aging, injury, and disease the HR may begin to fluctuate more predictably, going up and down in a clear, rhythmic pattern
bullet

for a brief report click here or related commentary click here or for a brief audio story click here- not required

bullet

In this example, chaotic function is normal and periodic function is abnormal

bullet

Brain wave example:
bullet

Brain waves (EEG) fluctuate chaotically (nonrhythmically) when healthy, even at different levels of consciousness
bullet

See Chapter 13 for examples of brain waves (EEG)

bullet

In a seizure, brain waves begin to become more rhythmic, less chaotic

bullet

In this example, chaotic function is normal and periodic function is abnormal

 

Time ------------------->

A The above an example of chaotic function.  It is relatively aperiodic (without a clear rhythm). 

Normal heart rate (plotted in beats/min across time) should look sort of like this.

 

Time ------------------->

B The above is an example of periodic function.  It is relatively rhythmic.

A person with a heart rate (beats/min) that plots out like this is in SERIOUS trouble.

 

Baby-HR.jpg (40144 bytes)

Click on the photo to enlarge it

The machine shown in the photograph is used during labor and delivery and plots the heart rate of the newborn (on the left side of the graph paper) and plots the relative strength of uterine (labor) contraction (on the right side of the graph).  

Notice that the baby's HR is a chaotic function (which is normal) and the mother's uterine contractions are somewhat rhythmic (which is normal).

Human structure
bullet

Fractal geometry is an aspect of chaos
bullet

Fractal geometry is capable of producing highly complex patterns with elements of unpredictability by using very simple mathematical expressions

bullet

Self-similarity is a characteristic of fractal geometry
bullet

Self-similarity means that the pattern of each small part of a structure resembles the pattern of the overall structure
bullet

 An example in nature is found in trees:  a pine branch resembles a whole pine tree, whereas an oak branch resembles a whole oak tree     pp

bullet

Other examples in nature of self-similar structures:
bullet

coastlines

bullet

plants

bullet

frost and snowflakes

bullet

mineral crystal formations

bullet

course of rivers and streams

bullet

Another way to see self-similarity:
bullet

Fractal surfaces have bumps, each of the bumps have their own bumps, those bumps have bumps, and so on --nearly infinitely, perhaps
bullet

Each of the tiniest bumps in such a system "kinda looks like" any of the largest of the bumps in the same system

bullet

Fractal lines have branches, each branch has branches, each of those branches have branches, and so on
bullet

Each of the tiniest branches in such a system "kinda looks like" any of the largest of the branches in the same system

bullet

Many human structures are self-similar, and therefore are chaotic (at least to some extent)
bullet

Example of structures in the human body that are self-similar:
bullet

Digestive tract (intestines, for instance)

bullet

Blood vessels (see Fractal Body - required)

bullet

Respiratory tract

bullet

Nerve pathways

bullet

Self-similarity means that MANY bumps or branches can fit into a small space
bullet

This makes absorptive surfaces, as the surfaces in the digestive tract that absorb nutrients, MORE absorptive than if they were smooth

bullet

This makes the blood vessels capable of carrying more blood to more places than if it wasn't so highly branched

bullet

Thus, chaos improves function by improving structure in the body

bullet

Human structures are complex but are built using only a relatively few genes
bullet

Remember, very complex fractal (chaotic) forms can be be produced with very simple math expressions
bullet

Thus genetic information may be simple, but it can produce complex structure and functions by using chaotic approach

 

The bottom line

What you have to know about chaos for your course:

bullet

You have to know what the term chaos (scientific sense) means in general

bullet

You have to know that some body functions are normally chaotic (and if they become more rhythmic, that's trouble) and examples

bullet

You have to know that many body structures are chaotic, exhibiting self-similarity, which increases their size/complexity (and thus increases the amount/complexity of their functions) --and know examples

If you are really interested in chaos, another good book is
Deep Simplicity: Bringing Order to Chaos and Complexity

 

This Mini Lesson may be updated or improved at any time. 
Check back frequently or use the link to the right to inform you of changes.


 

       For hints on how to use outlines and mini lessons click here.

© 1988-April, 2007 Kevin Patton ALL rights reserved

Back to the page you came from       This page updated on 04/01/07

 

 

Back Lion Den • Up • History & Culture • Homeostasis • Chaos • SET & Organelles • DNA Skins Search Menu
Monitor this page for changes!

 

Send feedback (or just feed) to me at: webservant@lionden.com
WARNING!  This site is unremittingly under construction.
You may fall into a virtual den of lions at any moment!
Terms of Use           You can feed the lions!

 

 

All the pages on this site have earned
(or at least paid for)
Clyde's Seal of Excellence

 

 

 Banner

 

 Locations of visitors to this page