Epidemiology
03 Oct 1994 12:01
I am particularly interested in epidemic models.
See also: Agent-based Modeling; Causal Inference; Ecology; Evolution; Memes and the "epidemiology of beliefs"; Plagues; Statistics
- Recommended:
- M. S. Bartlett
- Stochastic Population Models in Ecology and Epidemiology
- "The Relevance of Stochastic Models for Large-Scale Epidemiological Phenomena", Journal of the Royal Statistical Society C 13 (1964): 2--8
- Judith Hooper, "A New Germ Theory", Atlantic Monthly February 1999
- Karen Kafadar, "Smoothing Geographical Data, Particularly Rates of Disease", Statistics in Medicine 15 (1996): 2539--2560 [PDF reprint via Prof. Kafadar]
- Seth A. Marvel, Travis Martin, Charles R. Doering, David Lusseau, M. E. J. Newman, "The small-world effect is a modern phenomenon", arxiv:1310.2636
- Gail E. Potter and Niel Hens, "A penalized likelihood approach to estimate within-household contact networks from egocentric data", Journal of the Royal Statistical Society C 62 (2013): 629--648
- To read:
- Michael B. Bracken, Risk, Chance, and Causation: Investigating the Origins and Treatment of Disease
- Ewald, Evolution of Infectious Disease
- Matthew Graham, Thomas House, "Dynamics of Stochastic Epidemics on Heterogeneous Networks", arxiv:1304.4763
- Valerie Isham and Graham Medley (eds.), Models for
Infectious Human Diseases: Their Structure and Relation to Data
- Katherine M. Keyes and Sandro Galea, Epidemiology Matters: A New Introduction to Methodological Foundations
- Tom Koch, Disease Maps: Epidemics on the Ground
- Amanda A. Koepke, Ira M. Longini, Jr., M. Elizabeth Halloran, Jon Wakefield, Vladimir N. Minin, "Predictive Modeling of Cholera Outbreaks in Bangladesh", arxiv:1402.0536
- Maia Martcheva, An Introduction to Mathematical Epidemiology
- Alfredo Morabia, Enigmas of Health and Disease: How Epidemiology Helps Unravel Scientific Mysteries
- Lisa Sattenspiel, Geographic Spread of Infectious Diseases: Models and Applications
- Paul D. Stolley and Tamar Lasky, Investigating Disease Patterns: The Science of Epidemiology
- To write:
- Co-conspirator to be named later + CRS, "Electronic Social Networks as Disease Sensor Networks"