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Disease Evolution

By Zhilan Feng, Ulf Dieckmann and Simon Levin
American Mathematical Society (2006).

From the Back Cover
Infectious diseases are continuing to threaten humankind. While some diseases have been controlled, new diseases are constantly appearing. Others are now reappearing in forms that are resistant to drug treatments. A capacity for continual re-adaptation furnishes pathogens with the power to escape our control efforts through evolution. This makes it imperative to understand the complex selection pressures that are shaping and reshaping diseases. Modern models of evolutionary epidemiology provide powerful tools for creating, expressing, and testing such understanding.

Bringing together international leaders in the field, this volume offers a panoramic tour of topical developments in understanding the mechanisms of disease evolution. The volume’s first part elucidates the general concepts underlying models of disease evolution. Methodological challenges addressed include those posed by spatial structure, stochastic dynamics, disease phases and classes, single- and multi-drug resistance, the heterogeneity of host populations and tissues, and the intricate coupling of disease evolution with between-host and within-host dynamics. The book’s second part shows how these methods are utilized for investigating the dynamics and evolution of specific diseases, including HIV/AIDS., tuberculosis, SARS, malaria, and human rhinovirus infections.

This volume is particularly suited for introducing young scientists and established researchers with backgrounds in mathematics, computer science, or biology to the current techniques and challenges of mathematical evolutionary epidemiology.

Introduction, 6 pages, PDF.Introduction
"The goal of this volume is to show how to use mathematical tools to understand the evolution of infectious diseases. Inspiration for this project comes from work of the DIMACS Working Group on Genetics and Evolution of Pathogens, which is organized under the auspices of DIMACS’ Special Focus on Computational and Mathematical Epidemiology. This volume is divided into two sections: Model Infrastructure and Applications to Speci?c Diseases. Section I discusses the impact on disease evolution of various factors, including spatial structure, transient dynamics, coupling of within-host and between-host dynamics, heterogeneity in host populations, and drug resistance. Section II is concerned with investigations associated with speci?c infectious diseases such as rhinovirus, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. We thank Bruce Levin for his excellent Preface. We also express our gratitude to members of DIMACS’ sta? who kindly helped with the support of the workshop and the preparation of this volume. The leadership of Red Roberts in developing the multi-year epidemiology program has been an inspiration to many researchers, and this volume owes its existence to his e?orts. We also thank all the Purdue Mathematics Department for providing technical support. Finally, we thank the authors for their outstanding contributions. The workshop and the preparation of this volume were partially supported by an NSF grant to DIMACS, and by NSF and James S. McDonnell Foundation grants to ZF."
Table of Contents
Section I: Model Infrastructure
Section II: Applications to Specific Diseases

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Last updated: 28 Oct 2008

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