 MATHEMATICAL
MODEL A set of equations that describe the conceptual model in mathematical
terms. In biofilm engineering, the mathematical model will often be a set of coupled,
nonlinear, partial (or ordinary) differential
equations. The mathematical model can be either deterministic or stochastic.
MECHANISTIC
(or PHENOMENOLOGICAL) MODEL A representation of the physical, biological, or
mechanistic theory governing the system; in contrast to an empirical model.
NUMERICAL MODEL A
discretized version of the set of differential equations that make up the complicated
mathematical model; the numerical model is devised to be converted into computer code.
PHENOMENOLOGICAL MODEL
See Mechanistic Model.
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
Determination of the extent to which model behavior (output) varies as model
parameters are varied.
GLOBAL SENSITIVITY Variation of model behavior due to large perturbations of the
parameters; often determined using computer experiments.
LOCAL SENSITIVITY Variation of model behavior due to small perturbations of the
parameters; often determined by taking derivatives of the mathematical model with respect
to the parameters.
STATISTICAL MODEL See
Empirical Model.
STOCHASTIC MODEL A
mathematical model which contains random (stochastic) components or inputs; consequently,
for any specified input scenario, the corresponding model output variables are known only
in terms of probability distributions. In contrast to a deterministic model.
VALIDATION Determination
of the extent to which a model is well-founded and fulfills the purpose for which it was
constructed. Validation denotes the establishment of legitimacy. It requires verification
and successful evaluation.
VERIFICATION
Determination that the numerical model or computer model is a faithful representation of
the mathematical model, and that the mathematical model is a faithful representation of
the conceptual model. Verification, which denotes establishment of truth, is possible only
for the mathematical steps. Contributes to model validation.
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