Determination of parameter identifiability in nonlinear biophysical models: A bayesian approach

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Abstract

A major goal of biophysics is to understand the physical mechanisms of biological molecules and systems. Mechanistic models are evaluated based on their ability to explain carefully controlled experiments. By fitting models to data, biophysical parameters that cannot be measured directly can be estimated from experimentation. However, it might be the case that many different combinations of model parameters can explain the observations equally well. In these cases, the model parameters are not identifiable: the experimentation has not provided sufficient constraining power to enable unique estimation of their true values. We demonstrate that this pitfall is present even in simple biophysical models. We investigate the underlying causes of parameter non-identifiability and discuss straightforward methods for determining when parameters of simple models can be inferred accurately. However, for models of even modest complexity, more general tools are required to diagnose parameter non-identifiability. We present a method based in Bayesian inference that can be used to establish the reliability of parameter estimates, as well as yield accurate quantification of parameter confidence. © 2014 Hines et al.

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Hines, K. E., Middendorf, T. R., & Aldrich, R. W. (2014). Determination of parameter identifiability in nonlinear biophysical models: A bayesian approach. Journal of General Physiology, 143(3), 401–416. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.201311116

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