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MBI Online Colloquium - Modeling genes: The backwards and forwards of mathematical population genetics

Alison Etheridge head shot
January 22, 2020
All Day
Online

Time: 12-1 p.m.
Event Host: Mathematical Biosciences Institute (MBI)
Short Description: Alison Etheridge, professor of probability in the Department of Statistics at the University of Oxford, will lead a lecture and discussion on how to distill our understanding into workable models and then briefly explore the remarkable power of our simple mathematical caricatures.


Wednesday, Jan. 22 from 12-1 p.m.
Online (registration required)

Alison Etheridge is a professor of probability in the Department of Statistics at the University of Oxford and a fellow of the Royal Society (FRS), OBE. Her lecture is part of the MBI Online Colloquium 2019-2020 Season.

Abstract:
How can we explain the patterns of genetic variation in the world around us? The genetic composition of a population can be changed by natural selection, mutation, mating and other genetic, ecological and evolutionary mechanisms. How do they interact with one another, and what was their relative importance in shaping the patterns that we see today? This question lies at the heart of theoretical population genetics.

Whereas the pioneers of the field could only observe genetic variation indirectly, by looking at traits of individuals in a population, researchers today have direct access to DNA sequences, but making sense of this wealth of data presents a major scientific challenge and mathematical models play a decisive role.

In this lecture we'll discuss how to distill our understanding into workable models and then briefly explore the remarkable power of our simple mathematical caricatures.

Click here for detailed instructions on how to participate.

Register now.

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