3/19/2019
Over the past few days, I have kept in contact with Prof. Kruse and Dr. Tuohy to determine the best path to prep myself to tackle the problem of mathematically modelling an infection. Additionally, to better research infection models, I have ordered Keeling and Rohani's Modeling Infectious Diseases In Humans and Animals. I think it would provide modern insight on biology jargon and infection modeling.
Prof. Kruse recommended that I utilize Duke University's SIR Model examples with downloadable MATLAB examples. This is an excellent resource thus far, and has provided me with modeling techniques on MATLAB, as well as insight on how to read the SIR model. The utility can be found here:
https://services.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/materials/diffcalc/sir/contents.html
I have made some progress, and am still developing a full understanding of the SIR model. The Duke SIR utility comes with questions that I will look to answer in the following blog posts.
Also today, I was happy to hear that Lianyue Zhang, a fellow NSF recipient, will be joining us on our project!
Prof. Kruse recommended that I utilize Duke University's SIR Model examples with downloadable MATLAB examples. This is an excellent resource thus far, and has provided me with modeling techniques on MATLAB, as well as insight on how to read the SIR model. The utility can be found here:
https://services.math.duke.edu/education/ccp/materials/diffcalc/sir/contents.html
I have made some progress, and am still developing a full understanding of the SIR model. The Duke SIR utility comes with questions that I will look to answer in the following blog posts.
Also today, I was happy to hear that Lianyue Zhang, a fellow NSF recipient, will be joining us on our project!
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