popdinamica.blogspot.com
Genes, Populações e Epidemias: Agosto 2009
http://popdinamica.blogspot.com/2009_08_01_archive.html
Genes, Populações e Epidemias. Este blog não somente dedicado à pesquisa e ensino acadêmicos, ele é também dirigido ao público esclarecido, um espaço para discussões, acadêmica e extra-acadêmica, pública e geral. F Portela Câmara. Sexta-feira, 28 de agosto de 2009. A Ciência das Epidemias - Resumo. Modelos de transmissão de doenças infecciosas. 1, a transmissão aumenta e a epidemia se espalha até que, com o aumento da proporção de imunes, R começa a cair até atingir a condição R = 1 ou R. Uma vez identif...
popdinamica.blogspot.com
Genes, Populações e Epidemias: Abril 2011
http://popdinamica.blogspot.com/2011_04_01_archive.html
Genes, Populações e Epidemias. Este blog não somente dedicado à pesquisa e ensino acadêmicos, ele é também dirigido ao público esclarecido, um espaço para discussões, acadêmica e extra-acadêmica, pública e geral. F Portela Câmara. Sexta-feira, 29 de abril de 2011. Genes, evolução e formas pandêmicas de Influenza vírus. Se utilizar partes do texto, cite a fonte: Portela Câmara, F. Genes, evolução e formas pandêmicas de Influenza vírus, in www.popdinâmica.blogspot.com). Anos Vírus circulante Mortalidade (x...
popdinamica.blogspot.com
Genes, Populações e Epidemias: Julho 2010
http://popdinamica.blogspot.com/2010_07_01_archive.html
Genes, Populações e Epidemias. Este blog não somente dedicado à pesquisa e ensino acadêmicos, ele é também dirigido ao público esclarecido, um espaço para discussões, acadêmica e extra-acadêmica, pública e geral. F Portela Câmara. Sexta-feira, 2 de julho de 2010. Características da influenza H1N1 em pacientes hospitalizados em 2009. É importante ressaltar que quase metade dos pacientes tinha. Página inicial - Ciência das Epidemias. A Peste - Doc. Históricos. A Peste - Resumo. Ocorreu um erro neste gadget.
musingsoninfection.blogspot.com
Musings on Infection: Measles, vaccines, and the herd
http://musingsoninfection.blogspot.com/2015/07/measles-vaccines-and-herd.html
Meandering through infectious disease epidemiology and public health. Thursday, July 9, 2015. Measles, vaccines, and the herd. Measles death in the US since 2003 was recorded in Washington State recently, where a woman died from measles-associated pneumonia. According to a health department news release. Measles is highly contagious ( R. The basic reproduction ratio. Of the pathogen, can be as high as 18. Of a population can be made immune, and that fraction is maintained over time over time, then a path...
naturesmicrocosm.com
Evolutionary Applications | Koskella Lab at UC Berkeley
https://naturesmicrocosm.com/category/evolutionary-applications
Koskella Lab at UC Berkeley. Understanding coevolution of hosts and their parasites in the lab and in the field. Category Archives: Evolutionary Applications. The utility of model system research for applied evolutionary questions. July 1, 2014. For this month’s Evolutionary Application’s research highlights. I look at recent work exemplifying the use of model systems in addressing questions of applied interest:. In terms of real life application, the model yeast. Ie, strains with deficiencies in so-call...
naturesmicrocosm.com
Tree diseases | Koskella Lab at UC Berkeley
https://naturesmicrocosm.com/category/tree-diseases
Koskella Lab at UC Berkeley. Understanding coevolution of hosts and their parasites in the lab and in the field. Category Archives: Tree diseases. Tree diseases are in the headlines a lot these days, but are they new? Or have they been around since the dawn of trees? The answer is clearly all of the above, but what is it about now that is making them so prominent and capable of knocking out whole stands of trees? Tree disease of the month – Ash dieback. December 27, 2012. Have a happy holiday!
evolvingspaces.blogspot.com
EvolvingSpaces: Deterministic-Continuous models vs. Stochastic-Discrete models
http://evolvingspaces.blogspot.com/2011/06/deterministic-continuous-models-vs.html
Monday, June 27, 2011. Deterministic-Continuous models vs. Stochastic-Discrete models. Recently, I've been in several workshops/discussions where several people were using continuos numerical models rather than ABM. A very common question from these guys are along the line of "why we should use ABM when we have mathematical models? The argument is a known controversy (see McElreath and Boyd 2007. Old population size old population size * 0.3. Old population Bin(old population, 0.3). The first figure show...
evolvingspaces.blogspot.com
EvolvingSpaces: June 2011
http://evolvingspaces.blogspot.com/2011_06_01_archive.html
Monday, June 27, 2011. Deterministic-Continuous models vs. Stochastic-Discrete models. Recently, I've been in several workshops/discussions where several people were using continuos numerical models rather than ABM. A very common question from these guys are along the line of "why we should use ABM when we have mathematical models? The argument is a known controversy (see McElreath and Boyd 2007. Old population size old population size * 0.3. Old population Bin(old population, 0.3). The first figure show...
evolvingspaces.blogspot.com
EvolvingSpaces: May 2011
http://evolvingspaces.blogspot.com/2011_05_01_archive.html
Tuesday, May 17, 2011. R tips from around the web. The great thing of R, is that the number of available resources on the web is increasing dramatically. If you cannot afford expensive books, or you are looking straight questions or some tutorials you will find almost anything you need. Here's my short list of best place to learn and explore R other than the CRAN website:. Searching, Exploring and Procrastinating. New research method, elaborated codes, inspiring plots, novel ideas on everything related t...
musingsoninfection.blogspot.com
Musings on Infection: The information tsunami: Riding versus drowning
http://musingsoninfection.blogspot.com/2015/04/the-information-tsunami-riding-versus.html
Meandering through infectious disease epidemiology and public health. Saturday, April 4, 2015. The information tsunami: Riding versus drowning. A few things have come across my Twitter feed in recent weeks that relate to cognition and the Internet. The first is an article by Thomas Erren et al. On 10 elements of lifelong learning according to Richard Hamming. I'm a big fan of Hamming's ideas and research philosophy. And the authors do a nice job of updating some important points from his book. The future...
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