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         Mathematical Biology:     more books (100)
  1. Progress in Mathematical Biology Research
  2. Foundations of Mathematical Biology: Supercellular Systems v. 3
  3. Mathematical Theory Of Human Relations. An Approach To A Mathematical Biology Of Social Phenomena by N. Rashevsky, 1947
  4. Mathematical Models for Society and Biology by Edward Beltrami, 2002-01-10
  5. Mathematical Models and Immune Cell Biology
  6. The Evolution of Haploid-Diploid Life Cycles: 1993 Symposium on Some Mathematical Questions in Biology, June 19-23, 1993, Snowbird, Utah (Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences)
  7. Some Mathematical Questions in Biology: Sex Allocation and Sex Change : Experiments and Models (Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences) by Ont.) Symposium Some Mathematical Questions in Biology 1989 (Toronto, 1990-10
  8. Some Mathematical Problems in Biology. by American Mathematical Society., 1968
  9. Nonlinear Oscillations in Biology (Lectures in Applied Mathematics (American Mathematical Society), V. 17.) by Summer Seminar on Applied Mathematics 1978 (University of Utah), Frank C. Hoppensteadt, 1979-12
  10. Some Mathematical Questions in Biology: The Dynamics of Excitable Media (Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences, Vol 21) by Nev Symposium Some Mathematical Questions in Biology 1988 Las Vegas, Hans G. Othmer, et all 1989-11
  11. The Hierarchical Genome and Differentiation Waves: Novel Unification of Development, Genetics and Evolution (Series on Mathematical Biology and Medicine - 2 Vol. Set) by Richard Gordon, 1999-07
  12. Quantitative Mathematical Models in Radiation Biology: Proceedings of the Symposium at Schloss Rauisch-Holzhausen
  13. Biomat 2007: International Symposium on Mathematical and Computational Biology, Armacao Dos Buzios, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, 24-29 November 2007
  14. Some Mathematical Questions in Biology: DNA Sequence Analysis (Lectures on Mathematics in the Life Sciences)

121. Mathematical Biology
Mathematics in Biology The application of mathematics to biology has a long history, dating back to the beginning of the 20th century.
http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/AM_Dept/research/biology.shtml
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  • Applied Math Home Department Members Research
    Mathematical Biology
    A primary focus of current research in mathematical biology is understanding living organisms, either single - or multi-cellular, viewed as a network of genes and proteins, interacting through biochemical reactions. More specifically, the goal is to elucidate the two main processes that underlie life, namely replication and metabolism. This ambitious program, which relies in part on applying ideas from systems and control theory to molecular biology, is known as systems biology The underlying philosophy of studying the whole organism, rather than its constituent parts in isolation, dates back to the 1930's, but the impetus for the current emphasis on this approach is the desire to provide a framework for analyzing the wealth of molecular information made available by the genomics revolution of the 1980's and 1990's.

122. SpringerLink - Bulletin Of Mathematical Biology
Journal publishing original research papers, survey articles, and extended book reviews related to research at the junction of computational, theoretical and experimental biology.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/0092-8240
Username Password Remember Me Forgot your Password? Register Now Log In via Shibboleth or Athens
SpringerLink
springer.com ... springerprotocols.com Choose preferred language English Deutsch SpringerLink You have Guest access. What can I do as a guest? Search Basic Search Search For All Content Author or Editor Publication Volume Issue Page Advanced Search Content Search For Full Text Title Only DOI Author Editor Citation Publication (Title, DOI ISSN or ISBN Volume Issue Page Category and Date Limiters Content Category All Categories Only Journals Only Books Only Protocols Entire Range of Publication Dates Select date range Publication Dates Between Start Date AND End Date Order of Results Most Relevant First Most Recently Published First Alphabetical

123. Sebastian Roch - Sebastien Roch - Sébastien Roch
Probability theory, mathematical biology and theoretical computer science.
http://www.math.ucla.edu/~roch/
SEBASTIEN ROCH assistant professor ucla math home research teaching contact ... bio Photo: Sylvain Crouzet
About Me
I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles , where I am a member of the Probability and Mathematical Physics Group . I am also affiliated with the UCLA Bioinformatics Program I work at the intersection of probability statistics and theoretical computer science , with an emphasis on biological applications . More details on my research interests and publications can be found here . My work is supported by NSF grant DMS-1007144 The schedule of the UCLA Probability Seminar is here . To receive announcements regarding the probability seminar and other related activities, please sign up here
Committees
Mathematical Approaches in High-Throughput Genomics , IPAM, September-December 2011 Recent Trends in Probability and Related Fields , AMS Sectional Meeting, UCLA, October 2010 (Slides from the session are posted here SODA 2009 , New York, January 2009
Teaching
Fall 2010: (Probability Theory) Spring 2010: (Topics in Probability: Stochastic Processes in Evolution and Genetics) Winter 2010: (Probability Theory)
Recent Preprints (for a full list, see

124. Centre For Mathematical Biology - Home Page
The Centre is designed to promote research in mathematical biology at the University of Alberta through interdisciplinary research collaboration, a visitor program, a seminar series, a summer school, and postdoctoral and graduate education.
http://www.math.ualberta.ca/~mathbio/
Login to: CMB Calendar CMB Library Welcome to the Centre for Mathematical Biology website. The Centre seeks to bridge the gap between life scientists and mathematicians in solving problems of significance to Canadians. Its activities fall into three categories: (i)
facilitation of multidisciplinary connections between life scientists and mathematicians, and between academics and government/industry;
(ii)
training of a new generation of researchers; and
(iii)
development of interdisciplinary mathematical biology, locally, nationally and internationally. International Graduate Training Centre
The Centre is also the administrative hub for the International Graduate Training Centre (IGTC) an initiative of the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences (PIMS).
UPCOMING EVENTS Distinguished Visitor, Dr. Alan Hastings
From October 25 to November 1, the Centre will host Dr. Alan Hastings, University of
California, Davis. Dr. Hastings will present three Seminars as part of a Seminar Series involving the Centre for Mathematical Biology and the Departments of Renewable Resources and Biological Sciences.

125. Mathematics In Medicine Study Groups (MMSG)
Details of the annual week-long meetings in which mathematicians collaborate on medical problems. Reports from previous years, and information about the next meeting.
http://www.maths-in-medicine.org/
Mathematics in Medicine Study Groups
Mathematics in Medicine Study Groups (MMSGs) are workshops for interaction between mathematicians and academic and industrial experimentalists working within the life sciences.
Recent Study Groups

126. Mathematical Biology Digest - Docstoc
Preview and download documents about mathematical biology digest. Docstoc is a community for sharing professional documents, find free documents and upload
http://www.docstoc.com/search/mathematical-biology-digest

127. Artificial Intelligence And Heuristic Methods For Bioinformatics
NATO Advanced Studies Institute. San Miniato, Italy; 111 October 2001.
http://www.dsi.unifi.it/ai4bio
Artificial Intelligence and Heuristic
Methods for Bioinformatics
A NATO Advanced Studies Institute
San Miniato, Italy October 1-11, 2001
Co-directors: Paolo Frasconi (University of Florence) Ron Shamir (Tel Aviv University)
New Book: Artificial Intelligence and Heuristic Methods for Bioinformatics published by IOS Press. Table of Contents Home Schedule and program of lectures Online lecture notes and links ... Contact: ai4bio@dsi.unifi.it Artificial Intelligence and heuristic methods are extremely important for the present and future developments of bioinformatics, a very recent and strategic discipline having the potential for a revolutionary impact on biotechnology, pharmacology, and medicine. While computation has already transformed our industrial society, a comparable biotechnological transformation is on the horizon. In the last few years it has become clear that these two exponentially growing areas are actually converging. Molecular biologists are currently engaged in some of the most impressive data collection projects. Recent genome-sequencing projects are generating an enormous amount of data related to the function and the structure of biological molecules and sequences. Other complementary high-throughput technologies, such as DNA micro-arrays, are rapidly generating large amounts of data that are too overwhelming for conventional approaches to biological data analysis. The interpretation of this wealth of data may deeply affect our understanding of life at the molecular level, but the elicitation and the representation of biological knowledge are extremely challenging tasks, which are increasingly demanding powerful and sophisticated computational tools.

128. EEBSOC Conference 2004
Organized by East European Biology Society to bring together physicists, biologists, mathematicians and chemists looking for challenges in the biological sciences in the post-genomic era. Bratislava, Slovakia; 1923 June 2004.
http://www.eebsoc.org/conf2004/
POSTPONED! This event will be postponed to summer 2005 due to organizational issues. We apologize for any inconvenience it might have caused. New date will be announced soon Welcome! After succesful beta symposium in 2002 we are back with another challenge. Main aim of 2nd East European Sympozium in Bratislava, Slovakia in declared areas is to bring together physicists, biologists, and also matematicians and chemists who are looking for challenges in the biological sciences in the post-genomic era.
Today is October 31, 2010 Web site partially sponsored by:

129. First SIAM Conference On Life Sciences
Held jointly with the SIAM Conference on Imaging Science (2224). Boston, MA, USA; 2426 September 2001.
http://www.siam.org/meetings/ls01/

130. Forest Biometry, Modelling And Information Science
The Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich; June 25-29, 2001.
http://cms1.gre.ac.uk/conferences/iufro/

131. SUMMER SCHOOL IN BIOMATHEMATICS
II Summer School and Scientific Workshop. Propriano (Corse) France September 3 -7, 2001.
http://calvino.polito.it/~biomat/school.html

Research Training Network

Politecnico di Torino
Using Mathematical Modelling
and Computer Simulation
...
to Improve Cancer Therapy
Scientific Coordinator: Nicola Bellomo
Dipartimento di Matematica, Politecnico, Torino
nicola.bellomo
@polito.it
III Summer School and Scientific Workshop
(Second Announcement) Propriano Corse France September 2 - 6, 2002 http://calvino.polito.it/~biomat/school.html Focus on Signalling and Cellular Interactions School Director: Luigi Preziosi preziosi@polito.it The aim of the summer school is to provide young researchers with an overview of the state-of-the-art and trends on mathematical modelling and analysis of tumor evolution. The school will involve contributions from biologists, mathematicians, and physicists to maximize the interdisciplinary exchange of informations and ideas. The main goal is the analysis of the relevance of signalling and cellular interactions in physiologic and pathologic conditions.
List of lecturers
V. Capasso

132. Home Page For EuroMech 422
A Euromech Colloquium. Applied Mathematics, University of Leeds, UK; 35 December 2001.
http://www.amsta.leeds.ac.uk/Euromech422/
EuroMech 422
Pattern Formation by Swimming Micro-Organisms and Cells
Hosted by
Applied Mathematics, University of Leeds
Monday 3rd - Wednesday 5th December 2001 Euromech 422 on "Pattern Formation by Swimming Micro-Organisms and Cells" is being held at the University of Leeds on 3rd-5th December, 2001. It is timed to function partly as a Satellite Meeting to the Newton Institute Programme at the University of Cambridge entitled "From Individual to Collective Behaviour in Biological Systems" which runs from 10th September to 19th December, 2001.
This meeting is a Euromech Colloquium and will cover recent research on the behaviour and pattern formation by populations of micro-organisms, (e.g. bacteria, algae and slime moulds), as well as by motile cells (such as leukocytes and endothelial cells) which are parts of higher organisms and form structures during growth and in disease. The meeting will promote the sharing of ideas and techniques between the groups, both mathematical and experimental, working in these different areas. Common themes are expected to be
  • the mechanics of locomotion by pattern forming cells, on a substrate or swimming freely, and

133. DIMACS-CTS (National Chiao Tung University) Conference On The Interconnections A
Center of Theoretical Science, Chiaotung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan; 2426 May 2002.
http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Chiaotung/
DIMACS-CTS (National Chiao Tung University) Conference on the Interconnections among Codes, Designs, Graphs, and Molecular Biology
Dates: May 24 - 26, 2002
National Center of Theoretical Science, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan
Organizers:
Frank Hwang , National Chiao Tung University, fhwang@math.nctu.edu.tw
Fred Roberts , DIMACS, Rutgers University, froberts@dimacs.rutgers.edu
David Torney , Los Alamos National Labs, dct@lanl.gov
Presented under the auspices of the DIMACS Special Focus on Computational Molecular Biology
  • Workshop Announcement
  • Call for Participation
  • Program
    Lunches and Friday night banquet are provided free only to those who have registered before May 10, 2002. 5/27-29 tour to Kenting National Park can be booked only by sending an advanced payment of $300 USD (check addressed to Frank Hwang) before May 10, 2002. Local participants pay NTD 9990.
  • Registration
    There are no fees for this workshop. Pre-registration will be held on the DIMACS site.
  • Housing:
    Campus guest rooms are available at the following prices:
    Single: 800 NTD (34 NTD to $1)
    Couple: 1,000 NTD (34 NTD to $1)

134. DIMACS Workshop On Complexity In Biosystems
DIMACS Workshop Innovative Approaches at the Interface of Experimental and Computational Modeling. Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA; 810 April 2002.
http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Complexity/
DIMACS Workshop on Complexity in Biosystems: Innovative Approaches at the Interface of Experimental and Computational Modeling
April 8 - 10, 2002
DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ
Organizers:
Thomas Deisboeck , Harvard Medical School, deisboec@helix.mgh.harvard.edu
Lee Segel , Weizmann Institute, lee@wisdom.weizmann.ac.il
Eduardo Sontag , Rutgers University, sontag@gauss.rutgers.edu
Raimond Winslow , The Johns Hopkins University, rwinslow@bme.jhu.edu
Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Computational Molecular Biology
  • Workshop Announcement
  • Call for Participation
  • Program ...
  • Registration Form , preregistration deadline April 1, 2002 DIMACS Workshop Registration Fees Preregister
    before
    deadline After
    preregistration
    deadline Regular rate (1 day/2 days/3 days) Academic/nonprofit rate* Postdocs $10/day $15/day DIMACS Postdocs $5/day $10/day
    DIMACS Partner Institution Employees** DIMACS long-term visitors***
    Our funding agencies require that we charge a registration fee during the course of the workshop. Registration fees include participation in the workshop, all workshop materials, breakfast, lunch, breaks and any scheduled social events (if applicable)

135. IPAM - Cells & Materials: At The Tissue Engineering Interface
Cells and Materials at the Tissue Engineering Interface. Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 1821 February 2003.
http://www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/te2003/
February 18 - 21, 2003 Schedule and Presentations
Organizing Committee:
James Dunn (UCLA)
Michael Longaker (Stanford University)
Ichiro Nishimura (UCLA)
Stanley Osher (IPAM)
Bill Tawil (Baxter Biosciences)
Howard Winet (UCLA /Orthopaedic Hospital)
Ben Wu (UCLA)
Scientific Introduction
The field of tissue engineering has emerged from the idea of mimicking nature by stimulating autologous cells to differentiate and synthesize tissue-specific extracellular materials. This rapidly evolving, multi-disciplinary field represents a logical progression of current practice in tissue/wound repair. Numerous Tissue engineering strategies involve events, which occur simultaneously over multiple length scales with changing boundary conditions. Together, these multi-scale effects govern the interactions between living cells and their environment. Above the 10 to 10 m length scale, micro-architecture of the environment influence nutrient transport, which govern cell metabolism and cycle, and fluid mechanics, which affects cellular mechano-signal transduction. Continued tissues growth on this length scale is impacted by the changing boundary conditions for nutrient transport. At the other extreme, processes such as protein adsorption onto biomaterial surfaces, and cell receptor-protein binding, are influenced by processes at the 10

136. IPAM - Functional Genomics 2004 Reunion Conference
The second reunion conference for the Functional Genomics/Expression Arrays long program held at IPAM in 2000. Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 14 June 2004.
http://www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/fgrc2004/
Functional Genomics 2004 Reunion Conference
June 1 - 4, 2004
Schedule and Presentations Pictures
Organizing Committee:
Xianghong Zhou, Co-Chair (University of Southern California)
Lei Li, Chair (University of Southern California)
Introduction
This is the second reunion conference for the Functional Genomics/Expression Arrays long program held at IPAM in the Fall of 2000. Manybut not allof the speakers at this conference were participants in that program. The workshop is open to the mathematics, statistics, computer science, biology and medical communities. For a description of the scientific focus of the original program, see http://www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/fg2000/pa.html There is no registration fee. If you would like to attend this meeting, please contact us at fgrc2004@ipam.ucla.edu
Contact Us:
Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM)
Attn: FGRC2004
460 Portola Plaza
Los Angeles CA 90095-7121
Phone: 310 825-4755
Fax: 310 825-4756
Email: ipam@ucla.edu

137. DIMACS/IAS Workshop On Genomic Instability In Cancer: Biological And Mathematica
DIMACS/IAS Workshop, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, USA; 89 June 2004.
http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Genomic/
DIMACS/IAS Workshop on Genomic Instability in Cancer: Biological and Mathematical Approaches
June 8 - 9, 2004
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey
Organizers:
Natalia Komarova , Rutgers University and Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, natalia@ias.edu
Arnold Levine , Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and Robert Wood Johnson School of Medicine and Dentistry
Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Computational and Mathematical Epidemiology
Jointly sponsored by the Institute for Advanced Study.
  • Workshop Announcement
  • Call for Participation
  • Program
  • Information on Travel Arrangements There are no registration fees for this workshop.
  • Important Reimbursement Information Attendees who have been offered support should keep two rules in mind. Reimbursement for air travel can only be made for travel on US Flag Carriers, REGARDLESS OF COST. (For example, travel on airlines such as United, Continental, USAir, and others that are United States based are allowable. Travel on airlines such as Lufthansa, SAS, Air Canada and other airlines based outside the US cannot be reimbursed by DIMACS.) The second rule to keep in mind is to get original receipts for all reimbursable expenses.

138. MSRI - Show
PIMS-MITACS-MSRI Special Program (Summer Graduate Program). Banff, Alberta, Canada; 1927 June 2004.
http://www.msri.org/calendar/programs/ProgramInfo/231/show_program
Sign In

139. SIAM Conference On The Life Sciences
SIAM Conference on the Life Sciences. Held jointly with the 2004 SIAM Annual Meeting. Oregon Convention Center, Portland, Oregon, USA; 1114 July 2004.
http://www.siam.org/meetings/ls04/
Held Jointly with the
2004 SIAM Annual Meeting

Oregon Convention Center
Portland, Oregon
PlaceMenu("mainmenu") Navigation Bar
Sponsored by the SIAM Activity Group on the Life Sciences
About the Conference
The life sciences have become increasingly quantitative as new technologies facilitate collection and analysis of vast amounts of data ranging from complete genomic sequences of organisms to satellite imagery of forest landscapes on continental scales. As a consequence, mathematics and computational science have become crucial technologies for the study of complex models of biological processes. The SIAM Activity Group on Life Sciences brings together researchers who seek to develop and apply mathematical and computational methods in all areas of the life sciences. This conference of the activity group will provide a cross-disciplinary forum for catalyzing mathematical research relevant to the life sciences. It will facilitate rapid diffusion of new mathematical and computational methods in the life sciences, and may stimulate more researchers to work in these important areas. Mathematicians, life scientists, computational biologists, bioengineers and others interested in mathematical and computational analysis of biological systems are encouraged to attend.

140. IPAM - Proteomics: Sequence, Structure, Function
Research program on the analysis of protein organisation. Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM), UCLA, CA, USA; 8 March 11 June 2004.
http://www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/prot2004/
Proteomics: Sequence, Structure, Function
March 8 - June 11, 2004
Program Poster PDF Pictures
Organizing Committee
Tim Ting Chen (University of Southern California, Program in Molecular and Computational Biology/CS/Math)
Scott Fraser (California Institute of Technology, Biological Imaging Center)
Jing Huang (UCLA, Molecular and Medical Pharmacology)
Simon Tavaré (University of Southern California, Program in Molecular and Computational Biology /Math/Preventive )
David Wild (Keck Graduate Institute)
Participants
The long-term program involves a community of researchers. The intent is for long-term participants to have an opportunity to learn about proteomics from the perspectives of many different fieldsmathematics, statistics, biology and medicineand to meet a diverse group of people and have an opportunity to form new collaborations.
Activities
There will be a full schedule of research activities, seminars and workshops throughout the March 8 - June 11 period. Main events will include:

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