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Mathematics Faculty Colloquium - Colleen Mitchell
FAST-SLOW ANALYSIS OF A MODEL FOR THE STIMULATION OF ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY BY A COMPETITIVE INHIBITOR
Competitive inhibitors can, paradoxically, stimulate an enzymatic reaction at low to moderate doses. Competitive inhibition of an enzyme occurs when an inhibitor binds to the enzyme’s binding site and blocks the enzyme’s target molecule from binding. We recently proposed a detailed but straightforward mass action model for competitive inhibition of phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (PGK1) by Terazosin (TZ)...
Representation Theory Seminar - Luis Gomez Gonzalez
Title: Automorphic representations and L-functions for GL(1) over Q
Numerics in the Life Sciences
Speaker: Bruce Ayati, Department of Mathematics
Math Bio Seminar - Dr. Scott Whitmore; University of Iowa Institute for Vision Research
Title: Never pure and rarely linear: Unraveling the patterns and dynamics of inherited retinal degenerations with mathematical models
Abstract: "Blindness is seldom a binary condition. This is true even of forms of vision loss that arise through genetic mutations. Rather, blindness varies by pattern and by degree. For example, mutations in some genes typically cause loss in peripheral vision, while other genes typically cause loss of central vision. Stargardt disease, caused by mutations in the...
Mathematics Colloquium - J. Garrett Morris; University of Iowa Department of Computer Science
Title: Proofs and Programs
Abstract:
The Curry-Howard correspondence is one of (if not the) most significant foundational result in the study of programming languages and logics.
At its most fundamental, the Curry-Howard correspondence describes a deep connection between (predicative intuitionistic) logic with (simply-typed functional) programming: logical propositions are types, proofs of those propositions are functions inhabiting those types, and simplification of those proofs is evaluation of...
Welcome to be a mathematician, from my life and researches
Speaker: Lihe Wang, Department of Mathematics
Math Bio Seminar - Dr. Jeungeun Park; State University of New York at New Paltz
Algebra Seminar - Vic Camillo; University of Iowa Department of Mathematics
Special Lecture - Botong Wang; University of Wisconsin
Title: Volume inequalities and volume polynomials
Abstract: Many classical geometric inequalities, such as the isoperimetric inequality and the Loomis-Whitney inequality, can be understood and generalized using mixed volumes. In this talk, I will explain how these inequalities fit into a broader framework based on volume polynomials, which naturally relate mixed volume inequalities to intersection number inequalities in algebraic geometry. This perspective provides a unified approach to a wide...
Mathematics Colloquium - Botong Wang; University of Wisconsin
Title: Volume inequalities and volume polynomials
Abstract: Many classical geometric inequalities, such as the isoperimetric inequality and the Loomis-Whitney inequality, can be understood and generalized using mixed volumes. In this talk, I will explain how these inequalities fit into a broader framework based on volume polynomials, which naturally relate mixed volume inequalities to intersection number inequalities in algebraic geometry. This perspective provides a unified approach to a wide...
Math Bio Seminar - Dr. Jonathan Toubol; Brandeis University
Mathematics Faculty Colloquium - Raul Curto
Math Bio Seminar - Dr. Motasem Elgamel; Emory University
Algebra Seminar - Shashank Singh; University of Iowa Department of Mathematics
Math Bio Seminar - Garrett Young; University of Iowa Department of Mathematics
Mathematics Colloquium - Kioichi Oyakawa
Math Bio Seminar - Dr. Colleen Mitchell and Anna Leinheiser
Algebra Seminar - Edo Biluar; University of Iowa Department of Mathematics