Greiner, Alexander, M.Sc.

Greiner, Alexander, M.Sc.

  • Experimente, Modellierung und Computersimulationen zur Charakterisierung des porösen und viskosen Verhaltens von menschlichen Gehirngewebe

    (Third Party Funds Single)

    Term: 1. July 2021 - 30. April 2024
    Funding source: DFG-Einzelförderung / Sachbeihilfe (EIN-SBH)
  • Experimente, Modellierung und Computersimulationen zur Charakterisierung des porösen und viskosen Verhaltens von menschlichem Gehirngewebe

    (Third Party Funds Single)

    Term: 1. July 2021 - 30. April 2024
    Funding source: DFG-Einzelförderung / Sachbeihilfe (EIN-SBH)
  • BRAIn mechaNIcs ACross Scales: Linking microstructure, mechanics and pathology

    (Third Party Funds Single)

    Term: 1. October 2019 - 30. September 2025
    Funding source: DFG-Einzelförderung / Emmy-Noether-Programm (EIN-ENP)
    URL: https://www.brainiacs.forschung.fau.de/

    The current research project aims to develop microstructurallymotivated mechanical models for brain tissue that facilitate early diagnosticsof neurodevelopmental or neurodegenerative diseases and enable the developmentof novel treatment strategies. In a first step, we will experimentallycharacterize the behavior of brain tissue across scales by using versatiletesting techniques on the same sample. Through an accompanying microstructuralanalysis of both cellular and extra-cellular components, we will evaluate thecomplex interplay of brain structure, mechanics and function. We will alsoexperimentally investigate dynamic changes in tissue properties duringdevelopment and disease, due to changes in the mechanical environment of cells (mechanosensing),or external loading. Based on the simultaneous analysis of experimental andmicrostructural data, we will develop microstructurally motivated constitutive lawsfor the regionally varying mechanical behavior of brain tissue. In addition, wewill develop evolution laws that predict remodeling processes duringdevelopment, homeostasis, and disease. Through the implementation within afinite element framework, we will simulate the behavior of brain tissue underphysiological and pathological conditions. We will predict how known biologicalprocesses on the cellular scale, such as changes in the tissue’smicrostructure, translate into morphological changes on the macroscopic scale,which are easily detectable through modern imaging techniques. We will analyzeprogression of disease or mechanically-induced loss of brain function. The novelexperimental procedures on the borderline of mechanics and biology, togetherwith comprehensive theoretical and computational models, will form thecornerstone for predictive simulations that improve early diagnostics of pathologicalconditions, advance medical treatment strategies, and reduce the necessity ofanimal and human tissue experimentation. The established methodology will furtheropen new pathways in the biofabrication of artificial organs.

  • Multiscale modeling of nervous tissue: comprehensively linking microstructure, pathology, and mechanics

    (FAU Funds)

    Term: 1. July 2018 - 30. June 2019

2024

2023

2022

2021