Bioelectricity: A Quantitative Approach
Roger Coke Barr
Nerves, the heart, and the brain are electrical. How do these things work? This course presents fundamental principles, described quantitatively.Sign Up
Next session: 24 September 2012 (8 weeks long)
Workload: 6-9 hours/week
About the Course
In this class you will learn how to think about electrically active tissue in terms of individual mechanisms, and you will learn to analyze the mechanisms quantitatively as well as describe them qualitatively. The course uses many of the same examples used by Hodgkin and Huxley, who won the Nobel Prize for their experimental unraveling of the mechanisms of the nerve axon of the giant squid, and their creation of a mathematical model of membranes and propagation to understand its function. That work has been the foundational element of most subsequent understandings of electrically active tissue, whether in nerves, the brain or in muscle, including the heart.
In this course, topics include:
In this course, topics include:
- The electrical charging of active membranes from the creation and use of differences in ionic concentrations across the membrane.
- The stimulation of the membrane, both naturally and from engineered sources.
- The creation of action potentials by the membrane in response to stimulation.
- The chain reaction of membrane responses, with each small region or cell initiating an action potential in adjacent ones.
- The observation of associated electrical currents in terms of extracellular wave voltages they create, the basis of clinical measurements such as the electrocardiogram.
About the Instructor(s)
Professor Barr’s research career began as a collaborator of Madison Spach and John Boineau of the Duke Department of Pediatrics, on projects about the experimental study of body surface potentials in children, and the experimental measurement of their origin from potentials in the heart. These projects have continued throughout his career, and over time he has been author or co-author of more than 100 research papers. He developed the original mathematical strategy and computer programs for computing body surface potentials from those on the cardiac epicardium, taking into account the irregular shapes of both, a computational plan now known as the boundary-element method. He originated one method of inverse calculation of cardiac epicardial potentials from body surface potentials using statistical constraints. With Robert Plonsey he exploited the introduction of the cardiac bidomain model of Tung to show the looping current flow patterns that must exist in cardiac muscle and the unexpected propagation sequences that can result. This work formed the basis for the solution of problems in field stimulation, threshold variability, and defibrillation mechanisms. Together they also wrote the text Bioelectricity, A Quantitative Approach 3E (Springer). In 2008 Professor Barr received the IEEE-Engineering in Medicine and Biology Career Achievement Award, that organization’s highest honor.
Course Syllabus
The topics addressed in the course will include:
- Electricity in living tissue, “animal electricity”, Galvani and Volta
- Voltages, currents and sources in solutions.
- Electrically active membranes and their resistance and capacitance
- Diffusion and fields across membranes, Nernst equilibrium
- Ion channels
- Action potentials
- Impulse propagation, current along the fiber
- Electrical stimulation
- Extracellular fields 1,2
- Extracellular wave forms
- Transmembrane stimulation
- Field stimulation
Recommended Background
Insofar as Bioelectricity, this course begins at the beginning, so all the main ideas can be understood without prerequisite courses. As electricity is invisible, no one sees it, so the most important prerequisite is one’s willingness to bring imagination, reflection and patience to the topics, so as to allow the ideas to grow and knit together in one’s own mind. Some of the presentation uses equations and other mathematics that come from calculus and differential equations and other parts reason from the physics of electricity and the analysis of circuits, so background knowledge about these subjects is helpful. A course like this one usually is given to advanced undergraduates or early graduate students in science and engineering, as these students have taken calculus and physics, and perhaps differential equations and circuits, and thus are comfortable when notation or simple operations from these fields are used.
Suggested Readings
Reference text (not required): Bioelectricity: A Quantitative Approach
Course Format
The class will consist of lecture videos, which are about 12 minutes in length. Some videos will present new concepts, while others will show numerical calculations using concepts already presented, a kind of video problem session. There will be standalone homework assignments that are not part of video lectures and a (required) final exam.
FAQ
- Will I get a certificate after completing this class?Yes. Students who successfully complete the class will receive a certificate signed by the instructor.
- What resources will I need for this class?You should have access to a computer to put numbers into equations and get numerical results.
- Does the class require computer programming?There are no complex programming assignments. Some calculations have to be performed cyclically for a few dozen cycles, so one has to be able to write programs that can accomplish such repetition.
- Will I learn how to perform medical tests such as taking an ECG, and will I learn how these are interpreted?No. However, you will learn some fundamentals about what is measured, and where it comes from.
- Is this class hard?No and yes. In this class about a dozen basic ideas are put together into combinations that produce remarkable outcomes. No, it is not a subject where any one idea or any one step is especially difficult. Yes, it is a subject (and thus a class) that requires reflection and assembly into your own mind of how these ideas relate to each other in combination. As in gardening, you cannot make these ideas grow: you have to plant them with care and let them grow.
- What is the coolest thing I'll learn if I take this class?How a battery can be in salt water for 100 years, used over and over, and yet never discharge.
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