I asked an epidemiologist for some paper recommendations and got the following (which I havenât yet read):
*On the epidemiology of influenza, John Cannell et al., Virology Journal, February 2008.
*The population genetics and evolutionary epidemiology of RNA viruses, AndrĂŠs Moya, Edward C. Holmes & Fernando GonzĂĄlez-Candelas, Nature Reviews Microbiology, April 2004.
*Global trends in emerging infectious diseases, Kate Jones et al., Nature, February 2008.
I have also had my mind blown a little bit by Virulence evolution and the tradeâoff hypothesis: history, current state of affairs and the future. Learning more about viral evolution and evolutionary epidemiology has been fun, but/âand I remain uncertain how helpful this is in thinking about high-potential-consequence biorisks.
I asked an epidemiologist for some paper recommendations and got the following (which I havenât yet read):
*On the epidemiology of influenza, John Cannell et al., Virology Journal, February 2008.
*The population genetics and evolutionary epidemiology of RNA viruses, AndrĂŠs Moya, Edward C. Holmes & Fernando GonzĂĄlez-Candelas, Nature Reviews Microbiology, April 2004.
*Global trends in emerging infectious diseases, Kate Jones et al., Nature, February 2008.
I have also had my mind blown a little bit by Virulence evolution and the tradeâoff hypothesis: history, current state of affairs and the future. Learning more about viral evolution and evolutionary epidemiology has been fun, but/âand I remain uncertain how helpful this is in thinking about high-potential-consequence biorisks.