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  2. Mathematical modelling of infectious diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_modelling_of...

    Infectious disease dynamics. Mathematical models need to integrate the increasing volume of data being generated on host - pathogen interactions. Many theoretical studies of the population dynamics, structure and evolution of infectious diseases of plants and animals, including humans, are concerned with this problem.

  3. List of open-source bioinformatics software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_open-source...

    Open Bioinformatics Foundation. BioPHP. PHP language toolkit with classes for DNA and protein sequence analysis, alignment, database parsing, and other bioinformatics tools. Cross-platform. GPL v2. Open Bioinformatics Foundation. Biopython. Python language toolkit. Cross-platform.

  4. Comparison of software for molecular mechanics modeling

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_software_for...

    Comparison of software for molecular mechanics modeling. This is a list of computer programs that are predominantly used for molecular mechanics calculations. GPU – GPU accelerated. I – Has interface. Imp – Implicit water. MC – Monte Carlo. MD – Molecular dynamics. Min – Optimization. QM – Quantum mechanics.

  5. List of COVID-19 simulation models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_COVID-19...

    COVID-19 simulation models are mathematical infectious disease models for the spread of COVID-19. [1] The list should not be confused with COVID-19 apps used mainly for digital contact tracing . Note that some of the applications listed are website-only models or simulators, and some of those rely on (or use) real-time data from other sources.

  6. Source attribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_attribution

    Source attribution. In the field of epidemiology, source attribution refers to a category of methods with the objective of reconstructing the transmission of an infectious disease from a specific source, such as a population, individual, or location. For example, source attribution methods may be used to trace the origin of a new pathogen that ...

  7. Latent period (epidemiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latent_period_(epidemiology)

    In epidemiology, particularly in the discussion of infectious disease dynamics (modeling), the latent period (also known as the latency period or the pre-infectious period) is the time interval between when an individual or host is infected by a pathogen and when that individual becomes infectious, i.e. capable of transmitting pathogens to ...

  8. Eradication of infectious diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eradication_of_infectious...

    The eradication of infectious diseases is the reduction of the prevalence of an infectious disease in the global host population to zero. [1] Two infectious diseases have successfully been eradicated: smallpox in humans, and rinderpest in ruminants. There are four ongoing programs, targeting the human diseases poliomyelitis (polio), yaws ...

  9. PLOS Pathogens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLoS_Pathogens

    PLOS Pathogens is a peer-reviewed open-access medical journal. All content in PLOS Pathogens is published under the Creative Commons "by-attribution" license. PLOS Pathogens began operation in September 2005. It was the fifth journal of the Public Library of Science (PLOS), a non-profit open-access publisher.