#MathOnco Issue 26: personalized neuro-oncology tools, artificial intelligence in drug regimens, cell size heterogeneity
This week in
Mathematical Oncology
July 12, 2018 ~ Issue 26
From the editor
Today's issue includes a wide variety of math oncology publications and preprints including personalized neuro-oncology tools, artificial intelligence in drug regimens, and a neat cell size heterogeneity analysis based on cell lineage. By the way, I've been really enjoying reading many of our readers' tweets from #SMB2018, keep up the good tweets!
-Jeffrey West
#MathOnco Publications
Thinking Cancer
Authors: Pashov Anastas , Hernandez Puente Cinthia Violeta , Ibrahim Saddam Mohammed , Monzavi-Karbassi Behjatolah , Makhoul Issam , and Kieber-Emmons Thomas
A copula model for joint modeling of longitudinal and time‐invariant mixed outcomes
Authors: Esra Kürüm Daniel R. Jeske Carolyn E. Behrendt Peter Lee
Optimal dynamic regimens with artificial intelligence: The case of temozolomide
Authors: Houy, Nicolas; François Le Grand
Timing and Delays in Breast Cancer Evaluation and Treatment
Authors: Richard J. Bleicher
A personalized mathematical tool for neuro-oncology: A clinical case study
Authors: Abramo Agosti, Chiara Giverso, Elena Faggiano, Aymeric Stamm, Pasquale Ciarletta
#MathOnco Preprints
On an algorithmic definition for the components of the minimal cell
Authors: Octavio Martinez, M. Humberto Reyes-Valdes
Drug treatment efficiency depends on the initial state of activation in nonlinear pathways
Authors: Victoria Lucia Doldan-Martelli, David G Miguez
Analysis of cell size homeostasis at the single-cell and population level
Authors: Philipp Thomas
Network Reconstruction from Perturbation Time Course Data
Authors: Gregory R Smith, Mehdi Bouhaddou, Alan D Stern, Caitlin M Anglin, Orrod M Zadeh, Jake Erskin, Marc Birtwistle
Efficient pedigree recording for fast population genetics simulation
Authors: Jerome Kelleher, Kevin Thornton, Jaime Ashander, Peter Ralph
#MathOnco - Book of the month
Letters to a Young Scientist
Edward O. Wilson: The Pulitzer Prize–winning biologist imparts the wisdom of his storied career to the next generation by threading twenty-one letters with autobiographical anecdotes that illuminate his motivations for becoming a biologist." With section titles like "The Creative Process" or "What is science?" or "Theory and the Big Picture," this emerging classic is sure to interest the scientist young or old.
#MathOnco - Best of last month
Most clicked links of June
Inferring Tumour Proliferative Organisation from Phylogenetic Tree Measures in a Computational Model
Passenger mutations can accelerate tumour suppressor gene inactivation in cancer evolution
Cancer as a Social Dysfunction - Why Cancer Research Needs New Thinking
Do you see something we missed? Click the submit button below to send us an idea for next week's issue.
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