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Math Dept Colloquium: Drew LaMar (College of William and Mary, Biology)

339 Little Hall (The Atrium)

Fireflies, Finches, and Ferrers Digraphs In this talk, I will explore network sampling algorithms which have found use in answering questions about the distribution of finch species on islands, as well as synchronization of blinking fireflies.  My focus will be on graph structures associated with these algorithms, and in particular on a generalization of split

Rebecca Borchering (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

Connecting rabies dynamics in wildlife populations to surveillance data Raccoons are currently considered the only carnivore host in the northeast United States responsible for rabies virus maintenance.  We investigate  potential drivers behind seasonal rabies dynamics in raccoon, skunk, and fox populations.  I will present the time-series data which motivates this study along with some of

Math Dept Colloquium: Julien Arino (University of Manitoba, Mathematics)

339 Little Hall (The Atrium)

Spatial and Temporal Spread of Disease in Discrete Space The SARS epidemic of 2003 and the 2009 H1N1 pandemic illustrated the capacity of infectious pathogens to spread quickly over vast distances. However, rapid dissemination is not the only spatial and temporal aspect in disease propagation. In today’s globalized world, public health systems of different qualities come

Fifth Annual QSE3 IGERT Symposium

McKnight Brain Institute Room LG110A/B

The schedule of the Fifth Annual QSE3 IGERT Symposium can be found here: 5th Annual Symposium Schedule This year we have four invited talks by distinguished professors. Wayne Getz Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California Berkeley “A Computational Population Modeling Platform for Linking the Inner and Outer Worlds of Organisms” David

Maia Martcheva (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

On the principle of host evolution in host-pathogen interactions We use a two-host one pathogen immuno-epidemiological model to argue that the principle for host evolution, when the host is subjected to a fatal disease, is minimization of the case fatality proportion F. This principle is valid whether the disease is chronic or leads to recovery. In

Jed Keesling (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

Carcinogenesis The multistage model for carcinogenesis was developed in the 1950’s.  The model is largely attributed to Armitage and Doll in a 1954 paper in the British Journal of Cancer.  There were some follow-up articles in the next couple of decades expanding on the mathematics of this theory.  However, after that there was a fallow

Rebecca Borchering (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

The impact of resource abundance on consumer encounter rates (with an application to pathogen invasion risk) Territorial animals share a variety of common resources, which can be a major driver of conspecific encounter rates. We investigate how changes in resource quantity influence the rate of encounters between individuals in a population.  A spatial resource landscape

Sergei Pilyugin (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

The Perron-Frobenius theorem and its applications The Perron-Frobenius theorem states that a positive matrix admits a positive principal eigenvalue with associated posited eigenvalue. I will discuss the applications of this result for dynamics and differential equations.

Anaiá da Paixão Sevá (University of São Paulo, Preventive Veterinary Medicine and Animal Health)

368 Little Hall

Using mathematical model to understand the impact of various preventive and control measures on the dynamics of visceral leishmaniasis in Brazil Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a zoonosis with global distribution. Its incidence has increased in Brazil in recent years, thus coming to represent a serious public and animal health problem. The strategies applied in Brazil,

Omar Saucedo (UF Mathematics)

368 Little Hall

Calculating Human to Human Avian Influenza R0 via Likelihood and Jacobian Approach The transmission of avian influenza between humans is extremely rare, and it mostly affects individuals who are in contact with infected poultry. Although this scenario is uncommon, there have been multiple outbreaks that occur in small infection clusters in Asia with relatively low transmissibility,