Every year waves of illnesses sweep through college campuses. This seems a natural result of sleep-deprived college students living, working, and playing together. Such outbreaks suggest questions: How many people will become infected? How can illnesses be contained? And crucially: How is mathematics involved? Mathematical epidemiology is the study of modeling diseases, often using compartmental models. We can use such models to learn from past outbreaks and investigate theoretical future outbreaks. In this article we present models that were inspired by two real-life outbreaks at a small residential college campus: H1N1 influenza in 2009 and, surprisingly, mumps in 2016
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
BackgroundAn understanding of epidemiological dynamics, once confined to mathematical epidemiologist...
Every year waves of illnesses sweep through college campuses. This seems a natural result of sleep-d...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
For more than a year, the COVID-19 pandemic has been a major public health issue, affecting the live...
Biology and mathematics are key lessons in our curriculum from elementary to high school. Biology sc...
College campuses are vulnerable to infectious disease outbreaks, and there is an urgent need to deve...
Mathematical modeling in systems in which we have census population data on disease in close-knit co...
Population growth and spread, global climate change, and the emergence and reemergence of novel and ...
abstract: Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechan...
Infectious diseases have been a persistent challenge to global health throughout history, and they c...
Infectious diseases ranging from the common cold to cholera affect our society physically, emotional...
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
BackgroundAn understanding of epidemiological dynamics, once confined to mathematical epidemiologist...
Every year waves of illnesses sweep through college campuses. This seems a natural result of sleep-d...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
We describe a semester-long collaboration between a mathematics class and a biology class. Students ...
For more than a year, the COVID-19 pandemic has been a major public health issue, affecting the live...
Biology and mathematics are key lessons in our curriculum from elementary to high school. Biology sc...
College campuses are vulnerable to infectious disease outbreaks, and there is an urgent need to deve...
Mathematical modeling in systems in which we have census population data on disease in close-knit co...
Population growth and spread, global climate change, and the emergence and reemergence of novel and ...
abstract: Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechan...
Infectious diseases have been a persistent challenge to global health throughout history, and they c...
Infectious diseases ranging from the common cold to cholera affect our society physically, emotional...
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
Mathematical models of infectious diseases are a valuable tool in understanding the mechanisms and p...
BackgroundAn understanding of epidemiological dynamics, once confined to mathematical epidemiologist...