Warwick Public Lectures in Mathematics & Statistics
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ALL ARE WELCOME!
Most recent lecture: Wednesday 2nd May 2012
Hosted by the Department of StatisticsPeter Donnelly FRS, FMedSci (University of Oxford and Oxford Wellcome Trust)The Genetic Revolution (poster Genetic factors are responsible for a substantial part of the susceptibility to all of the common diseases afflicting humans, including heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, depression, and many cancers and infectious diseases. Recent advances in genomic science have dramatically altered our ability to "read" genetic differences between people, leading to an explosion in our understanding of the genetic basis of most common human diseases. These new tools have led to an explosion in the amount and nature of genetic data available, with statistical analysis methods critical to the scientific progress. It won't be long before these changes have an impact on the practice of clinical medicine. Over a longer timeframe, they offer hope for new treatments for disease, and genetics is likely to become routine in some parts of medicine. The talk, aimed at a general audience, will give a sense of the excitement of the science and some of the statistical challenges, as well as the opportunities and challenges for our health and society. Date: Wednesday 2nd May 2012 Peter Donnelly · Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics |
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Previous lectures:
Hosted by the Mathematics InstituteHendrik Lenstra (University of California at Berkeley and University of Leiden)
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Hosted by the Department of StatisticsDavid J Spiegelhalter OBE, FRS (Winton Professor of the Public Understanding of Risk, University of Cambridge)Living with risk and uncertainty — we're all going to die (sometime) Past experience and probability theory can be used to check the odds of your football team winning or judge the risks of activities such as riding motorcycles, taking illegal drugs, going into hospital or just living. Things get more difficult when we don't fully understand what is going on, like early on in the swine-flu epidemic, or when we are dealing with huge complexity, as in climate change. Then it can be helpful to admit what we don't know, and I shall show how we can use probability and statistics to measure how ignorant you are. Date: Monday 22nd November 2010 David Spiegelhalter · Understanding Uncertainty (blog) ·
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ALL ARE WELCOME !
See also:
Mathematical Interdisciplinary Research at Warwick (MIR@W)
You can register for any of the symposia or workshops online. To see which registrations are currently open and to submit a registration, please click here.
Mathematics Research Centre
Zeeman Building
University of Warwick
Coventry CV4 7AL - UK
E-mail:
mrc@maths.warwick.ac.uk





