Ebook: Mathematical Theories of Populations: Deomgraphics, Genetics, and Epidemics (CBMS-NSF Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics)
Author: Frank Hoppensteadt
- Genre: Mathematics
- Series: CBMS-NSF Regional Conference Series in Applied Mathematics
- Year: 1997
- Publisher: Society for Industrial Mathematics
- Language: English
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Mathematical theories of populations have appeared both implicitly and explicitly in many important studies of populations, human populations as well as populations of animals, cells and viruses. They provide a systematic way for studying a population's underlying structure.
A basic model in population age structure is studied and then applied, extended and modified, to several population phenomena such as stable age distributions, self-limiting effects, and two-sex populations. Population genetics are studied with special attention to derivation and analysis of a model for a one-locus, two-allele trait in a large randomly mating population. The dynamics of contagious phenomena in a population are studied in the context of epidemic diseases.
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