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The Lecture Series is presented by the Environmental Science Institute and the Jackson School of Geosciences ![]() Lecture Archives: Location: UT Campus, Welch Hall 2.224 Schedule: 5:45-7 - Pre-lecture Fun 7-8 - Lecture 8-8:30 - Q & A Session Web Broadcast: The Live Webcast will start at 7pm. Please log on at least 15 minutes before 7pm to download the necessary plug-ins to view our webcast. Directions: Welch is located on the corner of 24th Street and Speedway. Building & Parking Maps In the News: Professor uses a new math to predict disease spread Austin American Statesman - If pandemic flu strikes, will Austin be ready? Hi international (2005), Controlling Epidemics MIT Technology Review (2004), TR100: Top 100 Global Innovators Under Age 35 Newsweek (2003), The battle against bugs gets serious Friday, April 7, 2006 - 7 PM CDT
YOU MUST DOWNLOAD THE ENVIVIO PLUGIN TO VIEW OUR WEBCAST. Click image above to download plugin and view webcast.
Fighting Deadly Diseases: Strategies for Prediction and Containment by Dr. Lauren Ancel Meyers
Assistant Professor, Section of Integrative Biology, UT-Austin What is the Lecture About? ![]() Dr. Lauren Ancel Meyer introduces herself and talks briefly about what topics she will cover in your lecture on April 7, 2006. Play video
Time: 1:28 min:sec Size: 7.65 Mb Format: QuickTime
Lauren Ancel Meyers is an assistant professor in integrative biology at UT-Austin. She was named as one of the Top 100 Global Innovators under the age of 35 in 2004 in the MIT Technology Review. Recent awards and honors from UT include the 2005-2006 Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology Fellowship and the 2005 College of Natural Sciences Teaching Excellence Award. Her research involves using a combination of theory, simulation, and microbial experimentation, to work on problems at the interface of evolution and epidemiology. The Lauren Ancel Meyers Research Group applies network theory, agent-based simulation, and other quantitative tools to study the interplay between infectious disease transmission dynamics and the evolution of pathogens. In May 2003, she began collaborating with researchers at the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control to develop mathematical models of the transmission of SARS coronovirus, and to use these models to predict its spread and determine effective interventions strategies in urban settings and hospitals, as well as across larger geographic scales. Lecture materials are for educational purposes ONLY. We request that the use of any of these materials include an acknowledgement of the presenter and the Hot Science - Cool Talks of the Environmental Science Institute. Also include the disclaimer: May not be duplicated or commercially distributed as they are intended for education and private/classroom audiences.
The Hot Science - Cool Talks Outreah Lecture Series is sponsored by the AT&T Foundation and ConocoPhilips. |
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October 16, 2006
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