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This book grew out of the discussions and presentations that began during the Workshop on Emerging and Reemerging Diseases (May 17-21, 1999) sponsored by the Institute for Mathematics and its Application (IMA) at the University of Minnesota with the support of NIH and NSF. The workshop started with a two-day tutorial session directed to ecologists, epidemiologists, immunologists, mathematicians, and scientists interested in the study of disease dynamics. The core of this second volume, Volume 126, covers research contributions on the use of dynamical systems (deterministic discrete, delay, PDEs, and ODEs models) and stochastic models in disease dynamics. Contributions motivated by the study of diseases like influenza, HIV, tuberculosis, and macroparasitic like schistosomiasis are also included. This second volume requires additional mathematical sophistication, and graduate students in applied mathematics, scientists in the natural, social, and health sciences, or mathematicians who want to enter the field of mathematical and theoretical epidemiology will find it useful. The collection of contributors includes many who have been in the forefront of the development of the subject.
This book grew out of the discussions and presentations that began during the Workshop on Emerging and Reemerging Diseases (May 17-21, 1999) sponsored by the Institute for Mathematics and its Application (IMA) at the University of Minnesota with the support of NIH and NSF. The workshop started with a two-day tutorial session directed to ecologists, epidemiologists, immunologists, mathematicians, and scientists interested in the study of disease dynamics. The core of this first volume, Volume 125, covers tutorial and research contributions on the use of dynamical systems (deterministic discrete, delay, PDEs, and ODEs models) and stochastic models in disease dynamics. The volume includes the study of cancer, HIV, pertussis, and tuberculosis. Beginning graduate students in applied mathematics, scientists in the natural, social, or health sciences or mathematicians who want to enter the fields of mathematical and theoretical epidemiology will find this book useful.
This IMA Volume in Mathematics and its Applications MATHEMATICAL
APPROACHES FOR EMERGING AND REEMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES: MODELS,
AND THEORY METHODS is based on the proceedings of a successful one
week workshop. The pro ceedings of the two-day tutorial which
preceded the workshop "Introduction to Epidemiology and Immunology"
appears as IMA Volume 125: Math ematical Approaches for Emerging
and Reemerging Infectious Diseases: An Introduction. The tutorial
and the workshop are integral parts of the September 1998 to June
1999 IMA program on "MATHEMATICS IN BI OLOGY. " I would like to
thank Carlos Castillo-Chavez (Director of the Math ematical and
Theoretical Biology Institute and a member of the Depart ments of
Biometrics, Statistics and Theoretical and Applied Mechanics,
Cornell University), Sally M. Blower (Biomathematics, UCLA School
of Medicine), Pauline van den Driessche (Mathematics and
Statistics, Uni versity of Victoria), and Denise Kirschner
(Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical
School) for their superb roles as organizers of the meetings and
editors of the proceedings. Carlos Castillo-Chavez, es pecially,
made a major contribution by spearheading the editing process. I am
also grateful to Kenneth L. Cooke (Mathematics, Pomona College),
for being one of the workshop organizers and to Abdul-Aziz Yakubu
(Mathe matics, Howard University) for serving as co-editor of the
proceedings. I thank Simon A. Levin (Ecology and Evolutionary
Biology, Princeton Uni versity) for providing an introduction.
This book grew out of the discussions and presentations that began
during the Workshop on Emerging and Reemerging Diseases (May 17-21,
1999) sponsored by the Institute for Mathematics and its
Application (IMA) at the University of Minnesota with the support
of NIH and NSF. The workshop started with a two-day tutorial
session directed at ecologists, epidemiologists, immunologists,
mathematicians, and scientists interested in the study of disease
dynamics. The core of this first volume, Volume 125, covers
tutorial and research contributions on the use of dynamical systems
(deterministic discrete, delay, PDEs, and ODEs models) and
stochastic models in disease dynamics. The volume includes the
study of cancer, HIV, pertussis, and tuberculosis.
Beginning graduate students in applied mathematics, scientists in
the natural, social, or health sciences or mathematicians who want
to enter the fields of mathematical and theoretical epidemiology
will find this book useful.
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