Research Group

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Jan Plefka

FELLOW
Humboldt University
Jan Plefka is a professor at the Institute of Physics, Humboldt University, Germany. His research interests are quantum field theory, string theory, statistical mechanics, matrix models, integrability, and AdS/CFT correspondence.
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Anatoly Khazanov

FELLOW
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Anatoly is a professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research interests are: pastoral nomadism -- Central Asia; post-totalitarian societies, ethnicities and nationalism.
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Saskya van Nouhuys

FELLOW
Cornell University
Saskya van Nouhuys is an adjunct associate professor at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology in Cornell University. Her research interests are: population and community ecology; and insect behaviour.
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Yossi Feinberg

FELLOW
Stanford University

Yossi is a professor in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University. His research interest is game theory.

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Michal Altbauer-Rudnik

FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Michal is a professor in the Department of History at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her research interests are the social history of medicine, cultural psychiatry, the history of emotions, and early modern European social history.

Research Groups:Stochasticity and Control in the Dynamics and Diversity of Immune Repertoires: an Example of Multi-Cellular Co-Operation

[RG # 150]  Stochasticity and Control in the Dynamics and Diversity of Immune Repertoires: an Example of Multi-Cellular Co-Operation

March 26- June 30, 2017

Organizers: 
Uri Hershberg  (Drexel University)
Gur Yaari (Bar-Ilan University)

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We propose to study the general problems of functionality and robustness in complex biological systems, through a focus on the adaptive immune response as a model system. The adaptive immune response is a complex system, which comprises many interacting cells that are subject to various sources of stochasticity. We will address fundamental questions in the field such as how B and T cell repertoires collectively go through a process of stochastic diversity generation and clonal selection, and consistently yield functional controlled immune responses in a noisy environment. This understanding will be important in developing control strategies to modulate the immune response (e.g., with vaccinations or immune therapies) since, while predictable in the aggregate, human immune responses can display marked variability. For example, a small fraction of individuals do not raise antibodies following influenza vaccination, and efficacy rates for vaccination in older individuals are generally under 30%. Infections with West Nile virus are usually asymptomatic, but some patients experience severe neurological disease and even death. The potential role of stochasticity at different spatial and temporal scales in driving these diverse yet robus responses will be a main focus of our research group.

 

Mini Symposium Series

1st Mini Symposium Series on Stochasticity and Control in Biological Systems> 

2nd Mini Symposium Series on Stochasticity and Control in Biological Systems>

 

 

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Anthony Burgess

FELLOW
The Ludwig Institute for Cancer
Anthony is a professor in the Ludwig Institute for Cancer, Melbourne. His research interests are: The molecular mechanisms of signal transduction on the EGF receptor. Within this frame of interest the three dimensional stucture of the EGF receptor ligand TGF has been solved.