Talks and Presentations

Major Speaker (1 hour Long)

  • (Invited Speaker) CAARMS17 and IPAM: 17th Annual Conference for African American Researchers in the Mathematical Science, IPAM, Los Angeles, June, 1-4, 2011. Title: Hopf and Backward Bifurcations in a new SIS Malaria Model.
  • (Keynote Speaker) M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, A new way to model the dynamics of malaria transmission showing natural occurring oscillations.  SAMSA (Southern Africa Mathematical Sciences Association) conference, Gaborone, Botswana, November  29, 2010
  • (Shapiro Speaker) A within-mosquito mathematical model of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum and some implications for malaria control, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, March 2nd 2010.
  • (Guest Speaker) My Rotary Funded Visit to the University of Buea, Cameroon during May-July 2010, March 18 2010
  • (Seminar Speaker) Mathematical modeling of the within-vector dynamics of Plasmodium falciparum: single and mixed strains, NIH (National Institute of Health) Scientific Seminar series, Bethesda, MD, January 27, 2009
  • Guest Speaker at Kutztown University Sonia Kovalevsky High School Mathematics Day,  Part 1 (30 minutes): Mathematics: How females fare and how determination and hard work can overcome obstacles encountered,  Part 2 (30 minutes): “A Mathematical Model to Study the Impact of the Recovery Rate on the Dynamics and Transmission of Malaria in a Changing Population: Case of Cameroon”, January 11, 2008, Kutztown, University
  • Guest Speaker: Morgan State University Seminar Series, “ A Mathematical Model to Study the Impact of the Recovery Rate on the Dynamics and Transmission of Malaria in a Changing Population: Case of Cameroon”, Dixon Research Center, Room 125, Morgan State University, March 1, 2007.
  • Invited Speaker: BioConnections, Lafayette College, “A Mathematical Model of a vector-borne infectious disease – Malaria”, October 30, 2006, noon — Kunkel 102.
  • One of the Main Invited Speakers: CAARMS11 and IPAM, 11th Annual Conference for African American Researchers in the Mathematical Science, IPAM, Los Angeles, California,  “Applying a multiple Capillary Substrate and Oxygen Transport Model to Drug Targeting Strategies for Cancer Chemotherapy “, June 21-24, 2005.
  • Guest Speaker: University of Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, “The Dynamics and Transmission of malaria” (August 2001).

Conference Contributed Sessions (10-30 Minutes)

2011

  • (Presenter of talk) A mathematical model to highlight the importance of vector demography in  malaria dynamics and control. AMS Joint Mathematics Meetings, AMS book of Abstracts, [abstract: 1067-92-735] , New Orleans, LA, pp 254-255, January 6-9, 2010

2010

  • (Invited Speaker) M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, A new SIS malaria model with vector demography showing Natural occurring Oscillations.  Blackwell-Tapia Conference 2010,  conference, MBI, Ohio State University, Ohio, November  6, 2010

2009

  • Thomas Yuster, M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, Nathan Newman, A Mathematical Model of the Within – Vector Dynamics of the Plasmodium Falciparum Protozoan Parasite,  2009 International Conference on Mathematical Biology and Annual Meeting of the Society of Mathematical Biology,   University of British Columbia, Vancouver, July 27-30, 2009.
  • (Presenter of talk) M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, Tom Yuster, Nathan Newman, A Mathematical Model of the Within -Vector Dynamics of the Plasmodium Falciparum Protozoan Parasite, 2009 SIAM Annual Meeting (AN09), Denver, July 6-10, 2009.
  • (Presenter of talk) M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, Mathematical Model to Quantify the Impact of the Recovery Rate on the Dynamics and Transmission of Malaria in a Changing Population: Case of Cameroon, AMS Joint Mathematics Meetings, AMS book of Abstracts, [abstract: 1046-92-714] , Washington, DC, pp 254-255, January 5-8, 2009. http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2110_abstracts/1046-92-714.pdf

2008

  • M. Baird, L. De Pillis, A. H. Lin Erickson, S. Fleming, Z.  Lateef , H. Maurer,  A. Molinaro, M. I. Teboh-Ewungkem, and A. Wise, An Introductory Mathematical Model of Chronic Skin Inflammation, 7th AIMS International Conference on Dynamical Systems, Differential Equations and Applications, Book of Abstract, University of Texas Arlington,  pp 209, May 18-21, 2008.

2003-2006 (Presenter of all talks)

  • AMS-NAM , San Antonio , “ A uniformly valid composite solution for oxygen distribution, in skeletal muscle, within multiple capillaries and axial diffusion effects”, Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, January 12-15, 2006.
  • SIAM Annual Meeting , Hilton New Orleans, Louisiana, “ Effects of Axial Diffusion (Diffusion in the tissue in the direction parallel to the capillaries) on several interacting capillaries in skeletal muscles ”, July 11-15, 2005.
  • SMB International Conference , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,  “Co-current and Counter current flow of oxygen and substrate transport from capillaries to tissue “, July 25-28, 2004.
  • International Conference on Differential Equations and Applications in Mathematical Biology , Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada, “Mathematical Analysis of Co-current and Counter current flow in Tissue Capillary Exchange”, July 18-23, 2003.
  • SMB International Conference , Dundee, Scotland,  “Mathematical analysis of oxygen and substrate transport within a multi-capillary system in skeletal muscle “, August 6-9, 2003.

Poster Session

  1. IMA (Institute for Mathematics and its Applications) Career Workshop on Minorities and Applied Mathematics , University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota,  “Oxygen distribution in multiple capillaries in skeletal muscles with axial diffusion “, April 22-24, 2005

Universities

  1. Lafayette College , Easton, PA, “The mathematics of an Infectious disease in a changing population-Malaria”, February 2006.
  2. College of New Jersey, Ewing, NJ,  “The mathematics of an Infectious vector-Borne disease in a changing population-Malaria”, February 2006.
  3. Jackson State University, Jackson, MI, “Co-current and Counter current flow of Oxygen and Substrate Transport in a Multi-capillary system in Skeletal Muscles”, June 2004.
  4. Rochester Institute of Technology , Rochester, NY, “Co-current and Counter current flow of Oxygen and Substrate Transport in a Multi-capillary system in Skeletal Muscles”, April 2004.
  5. Lafayette College , Easton, PA, “Counter-current and Co-current flow of Oxygen and Substrate Transport in a Multi-capillary system in Skeletal Muscles”, January 2004.
  6. University of Michigan , Ann Arbor , MI, “Counter-current and Co-current flow of Oxygen and Substrate Transport in a Multi-capillary system in Skeletal Muscles”, January 2004.
  7. Lehigh University , Mathematical Biology colloquium, “ Malaria dynamics in an endemic region”, December 2003
  8. Lehigh University , Mathematical Biology (Math 207) class, A one hour lecture on Malaria Epidemics, Spring 2003, Spring 2004
  9. Moravian College Seminar , Malaria Epidemics, May 2003
  10. Lehigh University , Graduate Student colloquium, “Transport of oxygen and substrate with and without the inclusion of a facilitator across the capillary in the microcirculation” (January 2002)
  11. University of Virgin Islands, St. Thomas   “The Dynamics and Transmission of malaria” (August 2001).

Invited Workshops

  • NIMBioS Tutorial — Optimal control and optimization for biologists, University of Tennessee, December 15-17, 2009
  • Invited to Attend and Participate in a Workshop on: “The Application of Mathematics to Biomedical Problems”, University of Otago, New Zealand, December, 17-19, 2007.
  • Invited to attend a workshop at The Mathematical Biosciences Institute (MBI) on: “Opportunities in Mathematical Biology for Under-represented Groups Workshop,” MBI facilities, The Ohio State University campus, Columbus, Ohio, March, 23-25, 2007.
  • Reconnect Satellite Conference 2006 at Morgan State University: Simple and Complex Discrete-time Population Models in Ecology and Epidemiology, July 9 – 15, 2006, Morgan State University, MD.  A workshop on Integration of Research and Education, http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/reconnect/Morgan/
  • Participated in a workshop on “The Modeling of Cancer Progression and Immunotherapy”, December 12-16, 2005, American institute of Mathematics, Palo Alto, California, http://www.aimath.org/pastworkshops/tumorimmune.html

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