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- Q5562121 subject Q8221180.
- Q5562121 subject Q8818224.
- Q5562121 subject Q8980764.
- Q5562121 subject Q9210903.
- Q5562121 abstract "In probability theory, the Gillespie algorithm (or occasionally the Doob-Gillespie algorithm) generates a statistically correct trajectory (possible solution) of a stochastic equation. It was created by Joseph L. Doob and others (circa 1945), presented by Dan Gillespie in 1976, and popularized in 1977 in a paper where he uses it to simulate chemical or biochemical systems of reactions efficiently and accurately using limited computational power (see stochastic simulation). As computers have become faster, the algorithm has been used to simulate increasingly complex systems. The algorithm is particularly useful for simulating reactions within cells where the number of reagents typically number in the tens of molecules (or less). Mathematically, it is a variety of a dynamic Monte Carlo method and similar to the kinetic Monte Carlo methods. It is used heavily in computational systems biology.".
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink pg=946.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink cain.sourceforge.net.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink DeterministicVersusStochasticChemicalKinetics.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink stochastic_chemical_net.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink stochpy.sourceforge.net.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink synbioss.sourceforge.net.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink JPhysChemA(2000-104)1876.pdf.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink StochKit.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink Sinitsyn-etal-09.pdf.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink fulltext.pdf.
- Q5562121 wikiPageExternalLink www.stochss.org.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1071239.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1174535.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384876.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1463814.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q153224.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q17085534.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q176737.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q20085767.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q201426.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q2356542.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q3333611.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q3855635.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q4180825.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q5217283.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q5862903.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q6427428.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q6888390.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q722878.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q727546.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q8221180.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q8818224.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q8980764.
- Q5562121 wikiPageWikiLink Q9210903.
- Q5562121 comment "In probability theory, the Gillespie algorithm (or occasionally the Doob-Gillespie algorithm) generates a statistically correct trajectory (possible solution) of a stochastic equation. It was created by Joseph L. Doob and others (circa 1945), presented by Dan Gillespie in 1976, and popularized in 1977 in a paper where he uses it to simulate chemical or biochemical systems of reactions efficiently and accurately using limited computational power (see stochastic simulation).".
- Q5562121 label "Gillespie algorithm".