This workshop is jointly organized with African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS), and
South African Centre for
Epidemiological Modelling and Analysis (SACEMA).
This workshop is jointly sponsored by:
Nina H. Fefferman, DIMACS and Princeton University
Does Securing Infrastructure Against Workforce-Depletion Depend on Whether the Risk is Environmental or Infectious?
John Glasser, CDC
Evaluation of Targeted Influenza Vaccination, and possibly Medication Strategies via Population Modeling
Abba Gumel, University of Manitoba
Modeling Transmission Dynamics of HIV/AIDS: Some Results & Challenges
John Hargrove, SACEMA
Thoughts on Simplifying the Estimation of HIV Incidence
Ramanan Laximinarayan, Resources for the Future
Economic Aspects of Disease Epidemiology
Suzanne Lenhart, University of Tennessee
Rabies in Raccoons: Optimal Control for a Discrete Time Model on a Spatial Grid
Simon Levin, Princeton University
Emergent and re-emergent challenges in the theory of infectious diseases
Jamie Lloyd-Smith, Penn State University
Disease Emergence in Immunocompromised Populations
Edward Lungu, University of Botswana
HIV-TB Model: The Botswana Experience
Asamoah Nkwanta, Morgan State University
Some Probabilistic Results on the Non-randomness of Simple Sequence Repeats in DNA Sequences
Fred S. Roberts, DIMACS
Meaningless Statements in Epidemiology
(Talk at Workshop on Mathematical Modeling of Infectious Diseases in
Africa, Stellenbosch, South Africa, June 2007)
Alex Welte, University of the Witwatersrand
Incidence from 'Recent Infection' Prevalence
Abdul-Aziz Yakubu, Howard University
Epidemic Attractors In Periodic Environments