Danielle Middlebrooks
University of Maryland-College Park, Applied Mathematics, Statistics and Scientific Computing Program
Thursday, August 22, 2019, 3:00 – 4:00 PM
Building 101, Lecture Room B
Gaithersburg
Thursday, August 22, 2019, 1:00 – 2:00PM
Building 1, Room 1107
Boulder
Host: Paul Patrone
Abstract: Transition path theory (TPT) is a framework used to study the statistical properties of reactive trajectories. Reactive trajectories are those trajectories by which a random walker transits from one subset in the state-space to another disjoint subset. We develop analytical and computational tools based on TPT in order to quantify flows in time-irreversible Markov chains. These tools are applied to a gene regulatory network modeling the dynamics of the Budding Yeast cell cycle.
Bio: Danielle Middlebrooks is a doctoral candidate in the Applied Mathematics, Statistics and Scientific Computing (AMSC) program at the University of Maryland-College Park. She received a B.S. in Mathematics from Spelman College in Atlanta, GA. Her research focuses on Markov chain based methods to analyze complex networks. In 2017, she was awarded a COMBINE (Computation and Mathematics for Biological Networks) fellowship: a National Science Foundation-funded Research Traineeship (NRT) program in network biology at the University of Maryland.
Note: Visitors from outside NIST must contact Cathy Graham; (301) 975-3800; at least 24 hours in advance.