2015 EEID Conference Program_Final

Transcription

2015 EEID Conference Program_Final
Welcome to the
2015 Conference on the
Ecology and Evolution of
Infectious Diseases
Hosted by the
University of Georgia
Athens, GA
26-29 May, 2015
Sponsored by
About Our Sponsors
The University of Georgia has over 107 faculty conducting
infectious disease research. The Faculty of Infectious Diseases
spans eight schools and colleges at UGA, creating a consolidated
profile for infectious disease research at UGA. To learn more about
the FID, visit: http://fid.ovpr.uga.edu/about/
The Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases (CTEGD) is a
university-wide, interdisciplinary center established in 1998 at UGA to
foster research, education and service related to tropical and emerging
infectious diseases. The Center is made up of a wide range of research
programs that focus largely on protozoan and metazoan parasites, their
hosts and their vectors, with both international, on-site components for both research and training.
http://www.ctegd.uga.edu/
The University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine is dedicated to training future
veterinarians, providing services to animal owners and veterinarians, and conducting
investigations to improve the health of animals as well as people. Equipped with the
most technologically advanced facilities located on a university campus, the college is
dedicated to safeguarding public health by studying emerging infectious diseases that
affect both animal and human health. The College enrolls 96 students each fall and has
over 145 faculty members. http://www.vet.uga.edu/
The Odum School of Ecology at UGA is the first stand-alone
school of ecology in the world. Areas of research emphasis
include ecosystem, population and evolutionary ecology, and
infectious disease ecology. The Odum School offers
undergraduate and graduate degrees in ecology, as well as a
master’s degree in conservation and sustainable development. To learn more, visit
www.ecology.uga.edu
The College of Public Health at the University of Georgia promotes health
in human populations through innovative research, exemplary education,
and engaged service dedicated to preventing disease and injury within
the state and around the world. The College currently offers programs in
biostatistics, environmental health, epidemiology, gerontology, health
policy and management, health promotion and behavior, public health,
and toxicology. http://www.uga.edu/publichealth/
The Office of the Vice President for Research (OVPR) supports and
promotes UGA research and scholarly activity through improving the
day-to-day work environment of researchers, building new directions
in research, ensuring responsible research practices, and
communicating the value of research within and beyond the
university. http://www.ovpr.uga.edu/
The President's Venture Fund was established to assist with
significant funding opportunities that are brought to the
President's attention by the Provost with the support of a
department head and dean. This fund is supported by the Arch
Foundation for the University of Georgia, an organization
focused on securing the private financial resources that will help continue the rise in academic quality at
UGA. http://www.uga.edu/archfoundation/index.html
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About Our Sponsors
The Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases program at NSF h as supported
research on the ecological, evolutionary, and socio-ecological principles and processes
that influence the transmission dynamics of infectious diseases since 2000. The annual
EEID PIs meeting was recently merged with the EEID conference.
The Biomedical Health Sciences Institute at the University of Georgia unites
faculty in multiple schools and colleges focused on health and biomedical
research. Divisions include Neuroscience, One Health, and Basic and
Translational Biomedical Research. www.biomed.uga.edu
The Franklin College of Arts and Sciences is the oldest, largest and most
academically diverse college at the University of Georgia. Franklin College
comprises 30 departments in five divisions: Fine Arts, Social Sciences,
Biological Sciences, Physical and Mathematical Sciences, and the Humanities.
In addition to educating more undergraduates than any college on campus, the
Franklin College offers 76 graduate degrees and certificates in 42 fields of
study.
The mission of the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the
University of Georgia is to prepare leaders in the conservation and sustainable
management of forests and other natural resources; to discover ways to
restore and better use the earth’s natural resources; and to put into practice
forestry and natural resources knowledge.
The efforts of One Health @ UGA aim to move beyond preventing infectious
diseases toward a more comprehensive, global understanding of health that
includes social, physical and other components. The goal is healthier people,
healthier animals, and a healthier world. Preventing diseases and promoting health
are two sides of the same coin, as is “One World, One Health.”
We also thank meeting co-sponsors Emory University and Georgia Tech for contributing
financial support and for participation in our steering committee.
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About Our Sponsors
2015 EEID Organizers and Steering Committee:
Co-organizer: Sonia Altizer, Professor, Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia
Co-organizer: Andrew Park, Associate Professor, Odum School of Ecology and
College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia
Graduate assistant: Alexa McKay, PhD student, Odum School of Ecology
Steering Committee:
University of Georgia
John Drake (Odum School of Ecology)
Vanessa Ezenwa, Richard Hall, Courtney Murdock (Odum School of Ecology and
College of Veterinary Medicine)
Nicole Gottdenker (College of Veterinary Medicine)
Andreas Handel (College of Public Health)
Dan Colley (Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases)
Emory University
Jaap de Roode (Department of Biology)
Uriel Kitron (Department of Environmental Studies)
Georgia Institute of Technology
Joshua Weitz (School of Biology)
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Table of Contents
About our sponsors………………………………………………………………………….
2
Meeting schedule…………………………………………………………………………....
6
List of posters ……………………………………………………………………………..…
10
Field trip………………………………………………………………………………….……
20
Venue information……………………………………………………………..……………..
22
Athens dining guide ……….……………………………………………………..………….
23
Map of Athens area with hotels and conference venue…..………………………..……
27
List of conference participants ……………………………………………………………….. 28
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2015 EEID Meeting Schedule
Tuesday May 26: Registration and Welcome Reception
6:00pm
Registration opens, Classic Center Firehall
6:309:30pm
Welcome Reception, Classic Center Firehall
Complimentary beverages (beer, wine) and light buffet
Cocktails and other drinks available for purchase
Wednesday May 27: Symposium at Classic Center
8:00am
8:30am
Registration opens, Classic Center Lobby
(Posters can be set up starting at 8:00am)
Welcome and opening remarks: John Gittleman, Dean, Odum School of Ecology; Sonia
Altizer, conference co-organizer
Athena Ballroom A-E
Session 1: Dynamics of Neglected Tropical Diseases
Athena Ballroom A-E
Moderator: Courtney Murdock, Odum School of Ecology and Dept. of Infectious Diseases,
College of Veterinary Medicine, UGA
8:45
Keynote: Mosquito-host-virus dynamics
Laura
influence the transmission patterns of dengue Harrington
and Chikungunya viruses
Entomology, Cornell
Univ.
9:15
Environmental transmission of
Mycobacterium ulcerans drives dynamics of
Buruli ulcer in endemic regions of Cameroon
9:30
Understanding the mechanisms of a zoonotic Amanda
reservoir: Leptospira infection in Rattus
Minter
norvegicus in urban slums in Brazil
Ecol, Evol & Behav.,
Univ. of Liverpool
9:45
Double-check your hotel room: Bed bugs as
vectors of Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiologic
agent of Chagas disease
Biostats. & Epidem.,
Univ. of Pennsylvania
10:00
BREAK: Complimentary refreshments served in Classic Center Lobby
10:30
Keynote: Zoonotic transmission of parasitic
Thomas
and bacterial enterics at the human-livestock- Gillespie
wildlife interface
Environ. Studies,
Emory Univ.
11:00
Lethal exposure? Quantifying host contacts
with pathogen reservoirs in the environment
Ctr for Ecol. & Evol.
Syn., Univ. of Oslo
11:15
Wild primates demonstrate sickness behavior Ria Ghai
during non-lethal helminth infection
Andres
Harvard Medical
Garchitorena School
Michael
Levy
Wendy
Turner
Ecology, Univ. of
Georgia
11:30pm-1:30pm Lunch (on your own, restaurant guide provided on p. 23)
Pre-registered participants for Careers in Disease Ecology session meet in Athena Ballroom
6
Session 2: Social Sciences Interface with Infectious Disease Ecology
Moderator: Nicole Gottdenker, Dept of Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, UGA
Athena Ballroom A-E
1:30
Keynote: Poverty, Disease, and
Healthcare Delivery: Theory and Practice
2:00
Socio-ecological mechanisms structuring Shannon LaDeau Cary Institute of
mosquito communities and disease risk in
Ecosystem Studies
Baltimore, Maryland
2:15
How human behavior drives an emerging
infection: the case of Chikungunya
outbreak in Martinique island
Benjamin Roche UMMISCO, IRD
2:30
Human mobility, dynamic contacts and
infectious disease dynamics within a
resource-poor urban environment
Gonzalo
ProkopekVasquez
2:45
Matt Bonds
Harvard Medical School
Environmental Studies,
Emory University
BREAK: Complimentary refreshments served in Classic Center Lobby
3:15
Keynote: Moving targets: human
migration and disease control
Nita Bharti
3:45
Social networks and infectious disease:
Julie Rushmore
insights for conserving threatened wildlife
Ecology and Vet. Med.,
UGA
4:00
Mapping the global consumption of
antimicrobials in food animals
The Boston Consulting
Group
5:00
Poster Session I (see pp. 10-19 for a list of posters)
Charlie Brower
Penn State Univ. and
Stanford Univ.
Athena Ballroom F
Drinks and snacks provided in poster session hall
6:30pm Dinner (on your own, restaurant guide provided on p. 23)
Thursday May 28: Symposium at Classic Center
8:30am
Registration in Classic Center Lobby (Posters can be set up starting at 8:00am)
8:45am
Announcements and opening remarks, Andrew Park, conference co-organizer
Athena Ballroom A-E
Session 3: Macroecology of Infectious Diseases
Athena Ballroom A-E
Moderator: Vanessa Ezenwa, Odum School of Ecology and Department of Infectious Diseases,
College of Veterinary Medicine, UGA
9:00
Keynote: What drives parasite diversity?
Insight from community ecology
Pieter
Johnson
Biology, Univ. of Colorado
9:30
Global distributions of primate malarias
and implications for the evolution of
Plasmodium
Christina
Faust
Princeton Univ.
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9:45
Host range of RNA viruses predicts
transmission and virulence of human
infections
Liam Brierley Ctr. For Immunity,
Infection & Evol., Univ. of
Edinburgh
10:00 Biogeographical variation in blood parasite Nicholas
coinfections in congeneric island birds: a
Clark
mosaic of parasite-mediated selection?
10:15
Environ. Futures Res.
Inst., Griffith Univ.
BREAK: Complimentary refreshments served in Classic Center Lobby
10:45 Keynote: Linking macroecological patterns Amy
and microecological processes in multiPedersen
host systems
School of Biol. Sciences,
Univ. of Edinburgh
11:15 The path to host extinction can lead to the
loss of generalist parasites
Max Farrell
Biology, McGill University
11:30 Climatological factors affect the survival
and distribution of ticks in Panama:
Implications for tick-borne disease
transmission
Erin Welsh
Ecol, Evol and Cons. Biol.,
Univ. of Illinois at Urbana
Champaign
11:45am-1:30pm Lunch (on your own, restaurant guide provided on p. 23)
Session 4: Within-host Dynamics and Evolution
Moderator: Andreas Handel, College of Public Health, UGA
Athena Ballroom A-E
The who-to-whom of disease transmission:
Sebastian
Heterogeneity in transmission and its impact
Bonhoeffer
on disease evolution
A human challenge experiment points
towards viral load dynamics and viral
Ashley Sobel
genetics in driving influenza symptoms
Inst. Integr. Biol., ETH
Zurich
2:15
Detailed antigenic dynamics of influenza virus Charles
revealed by Bayesian phylogenetic clustering Cheung
Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center
2:30
Host barriers to cross-species
emergence of rabies virus
1:30
2:00
2:45
Nardus
Mollentze
Biology, Duke Univ.
Inst. for Biodiv, Anim.
Health & Comp. Med.,
Univ. of Glasgow
BREAK: Complimentary refreshments served in Classic Center Lobby
3:15
Keynote: Detecting an emerging drug
Nicole Mideo Ecol. & Evol. Biol, Univ.
resistance problem in malaria through withinof Toronto
host dynamics
3:45
Innate immunity as a structuring mechanism
Evelyn C
of parasite communities within and between
Rynkiewicz
hosts
Inst. for Evo. Biol., Univ.
of Edinburgh
4:00
Within-host competition and evolution of
resistance in P. falciparum malaria
Mary
Bushman
Pop. Biol, Ecol. & Evol.,
Emory Univ.
4:15
Phylodynamic analysis of hepatitis C virus
drug resistance evolution: the roles of cure
and superinfection of infected cells
Ruian Ke
Los Alamos National
Laboratory
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5:00
Poster Session II (see pp. 10-19 for a list of posters)
Athena Ballroom F
Drinks and snacks provided in poster session hall
Dinner Banquet / Social Gathering: Classic Center Atrium
7:00-10:00pm
Catered dinner and bar; Live music provided by Darnell Boys
Friday May 29: Symposium at UGA Chapel
9:15am
Welcome and opening remarks
UGA Chapel (North Campus, see map on p.20)
Session 5: Ebola Virus Dynamics and Control
Moderator: Joshua Weitz, School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology
9:30
John Drake
Odum School of
Ecology, UGA
10:00 Unidentified carriers of filoviruses in the
wild
Barbara Han
Cary Institute of
Ecosystem Studies
10:15 Keynote: Phylodynamic observations on
the 2014-2015 West African Ebola
outbreak
Trevor Bedford
Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Res. Inst.
10:45 The role of social network clustering in
Ebola virus transmission
Samuel
Scarpino
Omidyar Fellow,
Santa Fe Institute
11:00
Keynote: Ebola cases and health system
demand in Liberia
Pick up box lunches and drinks for hike in front of Chapel; board buses 11:30-11:45am.
12:00 –
4:00
Hike at Sandy Creek Park and Nature Center
Disk golf, kayaks, canoes and paddleboards available to rent
UGA Flinchum’s
Closing Reception / BBQ
Phoenix, Whitehall
4:30Home-style southern cooking and beverages provided
Forest
8:30
Note: Buses will take passengers from Sandy Creek Park directly to dinner location. No
transportation from downtown hotels to the dinner location is provided. Return buses will take
participants back to downtown starting at 7:00pm and running until 9:00pm.
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LIST OF POSTERS
Posters are organized by poster session and are numbered in order of presenter’s last name.
Wednesday evening poster session (Session I)
#
Presenting author (bold) and co-authors
Title
1
A. Alonso Aguirre ([email protected]), Gerardo
Suzán, Gabriel E. García-Peña, Ivan CastroArellano
Larissa Anderson ([email protected])
Understanding zoonotic emerging pathogens
across the landscape with a macro-ecological
approach
The effects of snail population demography and
saturating force of infection on schistosomiasis
transmission dynamics
Estimating the Impact of Cultural Variation on
Epidemic Behavior
Lawsonella clevelandensis gen. nov., sp. nov.,
isolated from human abscesses
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Noha Aziz ([email protected]),
Michelle M. Wiest
Melissa Bell ([email protected]), K. A. Bernard, S. M.
Harrington, T.-A. Tucker, M. Metcalfe, J. R.
McQuiston
Samit Bhattacharyya ([email protected]), Matthew
Ferrari
Erica Billig ([email protected]), Michelle Ross,
Drew Dolgert, Jason Roy, Michael Levy
Laura Bloomfield ([email protected]), Ronan
Arthur, Ashley Hazel, James Holland Jones
Moved to Thursday poster session
Rebecca Borchering ([email protected]), Steve
Bellan, Jason Flynn, Juliet Pulliam, Scott McKinley
Brooke Bozick ([email protected]), Vijay
Panjeti, Leslie Real
Emme Bruns ([email protected]), Janis
Antonovics, Michael Hood
Sarah Budischak ([email protected]), KE
Lane-deGraaf, D O'Neal, A Jolles, G Luikart, VO
Ezenwa
Spencer Carran ([email protected]), Matthew
Ferrari
Lilian Silva Catenacci ([email protected]),
Maíra da Silva Almeida, Richard Átila de Sousa,
Kauê Henrique Costa Ribeiro, Karina Rodrigues dos
Santos
Tina L. Cheng ([email protected]), Amy
Jeung, Joseph Hoyt, Kate E. Langwig, Winifred F.
Frick, A. Marm Kilpatrick
Characterizing transient-risk following herdimmunity level vaccination
A Bayesian Model for Identifying and Predicting
the Spatio-Temporal Dynamics of Urban Insect
Infestations
Contributions of Agricultural Network Structures
to Zoonotic Transmission Potential in western
Uganda
Effects of Resource Density on Encounter Rates
and Disease Outcomes
The effect of commuter-targeted vaccination
strategies on the spread of seasonal influenza
Disease distribution at ecological range-margins:
a comparative study
Host responses to infection shape the divergent
fitness costs of infection.
A phenomenological approach to estimating
measles incidence and outbreak risk
Occurrence of infection by Cryptosporidium spp.
In dogs and cats in Bom Jesus City, Piauí, Brazil
Impacts on hibernating bat sociality by an
emerging infectious disease, White-nose
Syndrome
10
15 Paul Cross ([email protected]), Emily Almberg,
Catherine Haase, Adam Munn, Paul Nugent, Olivier
Putzeys, Cheyenne Burnett, Mike Ebinger, Dan
Stahler, Doug Smith
16 Chris Dibble ([email protected]), Volker H. W.
Rudolf
17 Graziella DiRenzo ([email protected]), Elise
Zipkin, Evan Grant, Karen Lips
18 Helen Esser ([email protected]), Janet Foley,
Sergio Bermúdez, Nico Blüthgen, Frans Bongers,
Allen Herre, Roland Kays, Yorick Liefting, Jose
Loaiza, Michael Miller, Herbert Prins, Nicole
Stephenson, Patrick Jansen
19 Paige F.B. Ferguson ([email protected]),
Rachel Breyta, Ilana Brito, Gael Kurath, Shannon
LaDeau
20 Nicholas Fountain-Jones
([email protected]), Meggan Craft
21 Meghan Gallaspy ([email protected]), Annie
McClure, Adrienne Woods, Carlota Monroy, Patricia
Dorn
22 Allison Gardner ([email protected]), Brian F
Allan, Ephantus J Muturi
23 Amanda K. Gibson ([email protected]), Julie
Xu, Jukk Jokela, Curt Lively
24 Erin E. Gorsich ([email protected]), Clint
Leach, Colleen Webb
25 Katelyn Gostic ([email protected]), James
Lloyd-Smith, Adam Kucharski
26 Camden D. Gowler ([email protected]), Jessica
Nguyen, Kevin Hoang, Jacobus C. de Roode
27 Megan A. Greischar
([email protected]), Nicole Mideo,
Andrew F. Read, Ottar N. Bjornstad
28 Ashton Griffin ([email protected]), Andrew
Park
29 Mary Halpin ([email protected]), Helen
Piontkivska
30 Karsten Hempel ([email protected])
Poster retracted
Social and calorie costs of mange infection in the
wolf population of Yellowstone National Park
The ecological and evolutionary effects of
phenotypic variance depend on the relationship
between the mean phenotype and the
environmental optimum
Spatial and temporal disease dynamics of a
Neotropical amphibian community 10 years after
a chytridiomycosis epizootic
Host-tick-pathogen interactions across a wildlife
diversity gradient in Panama
Modeling infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus
(IHNV) transmission pathways in Pacific
salmonids
Relatedness and urban development shape viral
transmission dynamics in bobcats (Lynx rufus) at
a landscape level
Chagas parasite strain TcI predominates in the
main insect vector, Triatoma dimidiata, from
Mexico through Central America
Exploitation of ecological traps for mosquito
control
Do coevolving parasites maintain genetic
variation? A tale of spatial variation in infection,
susceptibility, and sex
Disease dynamics on wildlife contact networks
Natural history, epidemiology and human
behavior shape effectiveness of traveler
screening for emerging infectious diseases
Monarch butterflies vary their medication strategy
based on the level of parasite risk
Inferring transmission investment from within-host
dynamics: are malaria parasites less
sophisticated than we think?
Local Spread of White Pox disease in Acropora
palmata coral is influenced by colony size and
inter-colony distance
No Longer a Neglected Tropical Disease:
Molecular Evolution of Ebola Informed by the
Latest Epidemic
Exploring techniques of fitting a spatial epidemic
model to data: a simulation study
11
31 Jessica Hite ([email protected]), Katie Griebel,
Jessica Hite, Rachel Penczykowski, Marta Shocket,
Spencer Hall
32 Nathan Jacobs ([email protected]), Jessie
Barra, Tracey Lamb
33 Surendra Karki ([email protected]), Tavis K.
Anderson, William M. Brown, Tony L. Goldberg,
Gabriel L. Hamer, Uriel D. Kitron, Edward D. Walker,
Marilyn O. Ruiz
34 Aubree Kelly ([email protected]), Melissa E. Bell,
Brian D. Emery, Ben W. Humrighouse, Maureen G.
Metcalfe, John R. McQuiston
35 Neus Latorre-Margalef ([email protected]), Justin
D. Brown, Rebecca L. Poulson, Deborah Carter,
Alinde Fojtik, Monique Franca, David E. Stallknecht
Feeling sick? Get sexy: Parasites alter host
reproductive mode
36 Brian Lazzaro ([email protected]), David F.
Duneau, Robin A. Schwenke
Sexual Dimorphism and Costs of Reproduction in
the Drosophila immune system
37 Margie D. Lee ([email protected]), Tiffany Kwan,
Caner Kazanci, John Maurer
Genes, pathways, and resource allocation:
Modeling microbial communities
The role of innate immunity in apparent
competition between malaria parasites
Landscape features and vector abundance in a
West Nile virus hotspot
A potential novel pathogenic species of
Williamsia
Avian Influenza within-host reinfections dynamics:
How is subtype diversity maintained in mallard
ducks?
38 Ana V. Longo ([email protected]), Kelly R. Zamudio Spatial and temporal environmental controls of
skin microbial communities in a Neotropical frog
persisting with chytridiomycosis
39 Andrew J. MacDonald
Risk of exposure to the Lyme disease vector,
([email protected]), Cheryl J.
Ixodes pacificus, in southern California
Briggs
40 Katherine M Marchetto ([email protected]),
Mutualistic bacteria lead to asymmetric
Alison G Power
competition between two viral pathogens
41 Micaela Martinez-Bakker ([email protected]),
Aaron King, Pejman Rohani
Using Polio Vaccine Roll-outs in the US and
USSR to Infer Vaccine Efficacy
42 Clifton D. McKee ([email protected]), Ying
Bai, Nels G. Johnson, Cara E. Brook, Ivan Kuzmin,
Lynn M. Osikowicz, Alison J. Peel, Richard Suu-Ire,
Andrew A. Cunningham, James L. N. Wood,
Michael Y. Kosoy, Colleen T. Webb, David T. S.
Hayman
43 Lillian Moller-Jacobs ([email protected]), Courtney
C. Murdock, Greg R. Jacobs, Matthew B. Thomas
Phylogeography of Bartonella bacteria in Eidolon
spp. fruit bats across Africa
44 Sean M. Moore ([email protected]), Andrew
Azman, Justin Lessler
45 Riley Mummah ([email protected]), Björnstad O,
Ferrari M, Shea K
Larval diet alters the length of malaria parasite
incubation time in adult mosquitoes, significantly
impacting accuracy of disease transmission
predictions
Understanding the distribution of cholera burden
and risk in Africa: spatial modeling to guide
prevention and control efforts
Value of Information Analysis of Competing Ebola
Models
12
46 Maya Nadimpalli ([email protected]), Sarah
Rhodes, Marc Serre, Christopher Heaney, Jill
Stewart
47 Calistus N. Ngonghala
([email protected]), Giulio De
Leo, Mercedes Pascual, Andrew Dobson, Donald C.
Keenan, Matthew H. Bonds
48 Jo Ohm ([email protected]), Teeple, J., Nelson, W.,
Read, A.F. , Thomas, M.B ., Cator, L.J.
49 Sarah H. Olson ([email protected]), Corey M.
Benedum, Sumiko R. Mekaru, Nicholas D. Preston,
Jonna A.K. Mazet, Damien O. Joly
50 Rafaela Pessoa ([email protected]), Adrienne
Woods, Nicholas de la Rua, Carlota Monroy, Lori
Stevens, Patricia Dorn
51 Jennifer K. Peterson ([email protected]),
Andrea L Graham, Andrew P. Dobson, Omar Triana
Chaves
52 Kelly A. Pierce ([email protected]), Jesse
N Weber, Damien Caillaud, Lauren Ancel Meyers
53 Laura W. Pomeroy ([email protected]),
Rebecca Garabed
54 William J.M. Probert ([email protected]), Matthew J.
Ferrari, Christopher J. Fonnesbeck, Michael C.
Runge, Katriona Shea, Michael J.Tildesley
55 Roland Regoes ([email protected]),
Frederic Bertels, Christine Leemann, Karin J.
Metzner, Roland Regoes
56 Jordan Ruybal ([email protected]), A.
Marm Kilpatrick, Laura D. Kramer
Exposure to industrial hog operations is
associated with presence of antibioticresistant Staphylococcus aureus in the household
environment
General models for ecological drivers of poverty
Fitness consequences of altered behavior in
immune-challenged mosquitoes
Drivers of emerging infectious diseases: a
framework for digital detection
Is Triatoma dimidiata a Species Complex?
Clarifying Phylogenetic Relationships using two
Mitochrondrial Genes
Life history consequences of infection with
Chagas disease agent Trypanosoma cruzi for its
invertebrate host Rhodnius prolixus
Genetic evidence of differential host use in
Dermacentor variabilis
Multistrain transmission, waning immunity, and
host movement in endemic foot-and-mouth
disease virus transmission
Context matters in disease control
Parallel evolution of HIV-1 in a long-term
evolution experiment
Geographic Variation in the Response of Culex
pipiens Life History Traits to Temperature
57 Sadie J. Ryan ([email protected]), Amy McNally, Leah Changing physiological suitability limits of malaria
R. Johnson, Erin Mordecai, Tal Ben-Horin, Krijn
transmission in Africa under climate change
Paaijmans, Kevin D. Lafferty
58 Loren C. Sackett ([email protected]),
Taylor E. Callicrate, Robert C. Fleischer
Genomics of resistance to avian malaria in a
Hawaiian honeycreeper
59 Stacy Scholle ([email protected]), Katia
Koelle
The role of heritable and extrinsic heterogeneities
of viral transmission rates in shaping viral
phylogenies
Recovery from infection as a selective pressure
for the evolution of migration
Antagonistic coevolution with parasites may
constrain the spread of self-fertilization into
outcrossing host populations
60 Allison K. Shaw ([email protected]), Sandra A.
Binning
61 Samuel Slowinski ([email protected]), Levi
Morran, Raymond Parrish II, Eric Cui, Amrita
Bhattacharya, Curtis Lively, Patrick Phillips
13
62 Andrea Springer ([email protected]), Claudia
Fichtel, Sébastien Calvignac-Spencer, Fabian
Leendertz, Peter M. Kappeler
63 Julio Benavides ([email protected]),
William Valderrama, Daniel Streicker (presenting
author)
64 Saki Takahashi ([email protected]), Qiaohong
Liao, Thomas P. Van Boeckel, Weijia Xing, Junling
Sun, Victor Y. Hsiao, C. Jessica E. Metcalf, Zhaorui
Chang, Fengfeng Liu, Jing Zhang, Joseph T. Wu,
Benjamin J. Cowling, Gabriel M. Leung, Jeremy J.
Farrar, H. Rogier van Doorn, Bryan T. Grenfell,
Hongjie Yu
65 Bradford P. Taylor ([email protected]),
Jonathan Dushoff, Joshua S Weitz
66 Courtney A. Thomason ([email protected]),
Andrea L. Graham, Amy B. Pedersen
67 Tate Tunstall ([email protected]), Leah R.
Johnson, Cheryl J. Briggs
Hemoparasite infections in a wild primate: Crossimmunity shapes prevalence patterns
Spatial Expansions and Traveling Waves of
Vampire Bat Rabies in Peru
Hand, foot, and mouth disease in China:
modelling epidemic dynamics of enterovirus
serotypes and implications for vaccination
Process noise and the limits to inferring the basic
reproduction number of an epidemic: application
to Ebola virus disease (EVD)
Mechanisms of Within-host Parasite Community
Interactions
The effect of genetic heterogeneity on R0
68 Robert Unckless ([email protected]), Virginia M.
Howick, Brian P. Lazzaro
Balancing selection and convergent evolution in
an antimicrobial peptide
69 Kimberly VanderWaal ([email protected]), Eva Enns,
Catalina Picasso, Julio Alvarez, Andres Perez,
Federico Fernandez, Andres Gil, Scott Wells,
Meggan Craft
70 Katharine S. Walter ([email protected]),
Giovanna Carpi, Adalgisa Caccone, Maria Ana DiukWasser
71 Lauren White ([email protected]), Denise
Dearing, James Forester, and Meggan Craft
Modeling transmission dynamics of bovine
tuberculosis in Uruguay using dynamic cattle
movement networks
72 Katherine Worsley-Tonks
([email protected]), Zach Chillag,
Malavika Rajeev, Stacey Lance, Vanessa Ezenwa
73 Trieste Musial ([email protected]),Roman Biek,
Lance Waller, Les Real
Added following program printing
Heterozygosity-fitness correlations are context
dependent in the wild
Within-vector diversity of the Lyme disease
bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi
Comparing empirical contact networks: How
should "contact" be defined?
Reconstructing ecological dynamics with viral
genomic data
14
Thursday evening poster session (Session II)
#
1
Presenting author (bold) and co-authors
O.A. Aleuy ([email protected]), K. Ruckstuhl, N.
Simmons, A. Veitch, S. Kutz
2
Monique Ambrose ([email protected]), Adam
Kucharski, James Lloyd-Smith
Karoun H. Bagamian ([email protected]),
Richard Rheingans
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Jacob Ball ([email protected]), Helena Chapman,
Nathalie Abenoza, Daniela Solis, Alyson Young,
Eric Dumonteil
Douglas G. Barron ([email protected]),
Ahmet K. Uysal, Toru Shimizu, Nathan D. BurkettCadena, Lynn B. Martin
Daniel Becker ([email protected]), Richard Hall
Lindsay M. Beck-Johnson ([email protected]), Tom Lindström, Michael
J. Tildesley, Colleen T. Webb
Rotem Ben-Shachar ([email protected]),
Katia Koelle
Amrita Bhattacharya ([email protected]),
Farrah Bashey-Visser
Ruthie Birger ([email protected]), Jose
Lourenco, Bryan Grenfell, Oliver Pybus
Philip Birget ([email protected]), Charlotte
Repton, Megan Greischar, Petra Schneider, Sarah
Reece
Michael Buhnerkempe
([email protected]), Katelyn Gostic,
Miran Park, Prianna Ahsan, James O. Lloyd-Smith
Sarah C. Burgan ([email protected]),
Stephanie S. Gervasi, Lynn B. Martin
Edwin Antonio Carbajal ([email protected]),
Kyungyoon Kwon, Adriana Paredes, Miguel Marzal,
Cristina Guerra-Giraldez, Hector Hugo Garcia,
Theodore Nash, Siddhartha Mahanty
Ricardo Castillo-Neyra ([email protected]), Javier
Quintanilla, Alison M. Buttenheim, Valerie PazSoldan, Fernando S. Malaga Chavez, Juan Cornejo
del Carpio, Andy Cataccora Rospigliossi, Corentin
M. Barbu, Cesar Naquira, Michael Z. Levy
Title
Dall’s sheep ewe fitness and offspring sex are
affected by abundance of gastrointestinal
parasites
Inferring the spatial scale of human monkeypox
transmission from epidemiological line list data
Effects of climate variability and population
density on the relationship between undernutrition
and diarrheal diseases in eastern Africa
Medical Education as a Barrier to Chagas
Disease Control in Rural Yucatan
Behavioral and neurological correlates of vector
avoidance strategies
Heterogeneity in patch quality buffers
metapopulations against pathogen impacts
Exploration of ensemble modeling for
epidemiology using a Foot and Mouth Disease
outbreak
Statistical fits of minimal within-host models
provide insights into virological differences
between dengue serotypes
Is bacteriocin production competitor induced?
Modeling within-host HCV lineage patterns: a
mechanistic approach
The effect of the within-host resource
environment on malaria parasite reproductive
strategies
Mapping influenza transmission in the ferret
model to transmission in humans
Cytokines as Mediators of Defense and Drivers of
Variation in Host Competence
Development of a Monoclonal Antibody Capture
ELISA for Detection of Parasite Antigens in
Taenia solium Cysticercosis
Spatio-Temporal Variation in Triatomine
Household Infestation in a City with Urbanized
Chagas Disease
15
16 Lilian Silva Catenacci ([email protected]), De
Vleeschouwer KM; Deem SL; Palmer J; Parker P;
Travassos-da-Rosa ES
Conservation Medicine Program in The Atlantic
Forest of Bahia, Brazil
17 Quentin Caudron ([email protected]),
Bryan Grenfell
The influence of seasonal drivers on the
predictability of measles dynamics
18 David Champredon
([email protected]), Jonathan Dushoff
19 Elliott Chiu ([email protected]), Ryan
Mackie, Miles Mckenna, Karen Fox, Sue
VandeWoude
20 Emily Cornelius ([email protected]), Jennifer
C. Owen, Dusty A. Arsnoe, Mary C. Garvin
21 Katherine Cumnock ([email protected]),
Brenda Torres, Anne Thomas Tate, David
Schneider
22 Gillian Eastwood ([email protected]), Scott
Weaver, Rosemary Sang
23 Zach Gajewski ([email protected]), Daniel Medina,
Jenifer Walke, Matthew Becker, Lisa Belden
24 Nathan Galloway
([email protected]), Chris Geremia,
Jennifer A Hoeting, N Thompson Hobbs, Michael F
Antolin
25 Romain Garnier ([email protected]), Kathryn
A. Watt, Jill G. Pilkington, Josephine M. Pemberton,
Daniel H. Nussey, Andrea L. Graham
26 Stephanie S. Gervasi ([email protected]),
Nathan Burkett-Cadena, Thomas R. Unnasch, Lynn
B. Martin
27 Suma Ghosh ([email protected]), Matthew J.
Ferrari, Ashutosh K. Pathak, Isabella M. Cattadori
28 John R. Giles ([email protected]), Peggy Eby,
Alison J Peel, Raina K Plowright, Hamish McCallum
Real-time estimation of key epidemiological
parameters: a critical review
Fluorescence in situ hybridization detection of
endogenous and exogenous feline leukemia in
domestic and wild felids
Leukocyte response to Eastern Equine
Encephalomyelitis Virus in a Wild Passerine Bird
Malarial Infection Dynamics: Can we predict an
infection state transition?
29 Sarah A. Hamer ([email protected]), Emily
B. Cohen, Lisa D. Auckland, Peter P. Marra
30 John Hanley ([email protected]), Lori Stevens,
Carlota Monroy, Dulce Bustamante , Lucia Orantes,
Leslie Morrissey, Sara Cahan, Patricia Dorn, Donna
Rizzo
31 Sarah M. Hatcher ([email protected]), Sarah
Rhodes, Christopher D. Heaney, Jesper Larsen,
Sharon Jiang, Thao Le, Jill Stewart
Investigating the Enzootic Ecology of Arboviruses
in Sylvatic Regions of Kenya
The Effect of Zooplankton Feeding on the
Amphibian Chytrid Fungus
Population Dynamics of Colorado Mule Deer with
Endemic Chronic Wasting Disease
Nutrition and immunity as determinants of
overwinter survival in a wild ruminant population
Vector preferences and host defenses in the West
Nile virus system: A role for avian stress
hormones?
Within-host environment can alter the life-history
traits of parasites in chronic infection
Determining the role of fruit bat population
dynamics in the emergence of Hendra virus in
Australia
Avian migrants facilitate invasions of Neotropical
ticks and tick-borne pathogens into the United
States
A Comparative Study of Feature Selection Using
Logistic Regression and ExSTraCS: Determining
Significant Risk Factors of Triatoma dimidiata
Infestation
Prevalence of methicillin- and multidrug resistant
S. aureus among children living with industrial
hog operation workers in North Carolina
16
32 Zachary C. Holmes ([email protected]),
Maria L. Zambrano, Amanda J. Williams-Newkirk,
Gregory A. Dasch
33 Joseph R. Hoyt ([email protected]), Kate E.
Langwig, Winifred F. Frick, A. Marm Kilpatrick
34 Jaewoon Jeong ([email protected]), Hamish
McCallum, Alison Peel, Craig Smith
Improved Multi-Locus Sequence Typing of the
Ubiquitous Francisella-like Endosymbiont of
Dermacentor Ticks
Sociality and the transmission of white nose
syndrome, an emerging infectious disease of bats
Modelling transmission dynamics of a novel
Alphacoronavirus in an Australian population of
large-footed myotis (Myotis macropus)
35 Pauline L. Kamath ([email protected]), Jeffrey
Genomic assessment of brucellosis transmission
T. Foster, Kevin P. Drees, Christine Quance, Suelee among wildlife and livestock in the Greater
Robbe-Austerman, Neil J. Anderson, P. Ryan
Yellowstone Ecosystem
Clarke, Eric K. Cole, William H. Edwards, Jack C.
Rhyan, John J. Treanor, Rick L. Wallen, Gordon
Luikart, Paul C. Cross
36 RajReni B. Kaul ([email protected]), Abigail L. Smith,
John M. Drake
37 David A. Kennedy ([email protected]), Patricia A
Dunn, Matt J Jones, Chris Cairns, Rahel Salathe,
Andrew F Read
38 Tony Kovach ([email protected]), A. Marm
Kilpatrick
39 Kate E. Langwig ([email protected]), Joseph R.
Hoyt, Katy L. Parise, Joe Kath, Dan Kirk, Winifred F.
Frick, Jeffrey T. Foster, A. Marm Kilpatrick
40 Ariel Leon ([email protected]), Dana M. Hawley
41 Karen Levy ([email protected]), Nikolay
Braykov, Joseph Eisenberg, Marissa Grossman,
Lixin Zhang, William Cevallos, Karla Vasquez,
Diana Muñoz, Andrés Acevedo, Kara Moser, Carl
Marrs, Betsy Foxman, James Trostle, Gabriel
Trueba
42 Jennifer Malmberg
([email protected]), Justin Lee,
Sahaja Templin-Hladky, Ryan M. Troyer, Ryan
Mackie Sue VandeWoude
43 Hamish McCallum ([email protected]),
Tracey Hollings, Menna Jones, Nick Mooney
44 Amalie McKee ([email protected]), Matthew J.
Ferrari, Katriona Shea
45 Cricket Gullickson ([email protected]),
Michael Mina (presenting author)
46 Sinead Morris ([email protected]), Bryan
Grenfell, Jon Zelner, Frances Gulland, Deborah
Fauquier, Patricia Rosel, Teri Rowles
Experimental Pulse Vaccination System
From dust to data: inferring disease dynamics
from pathogen density in the environment
West Nile virus transmission in wetlands of
Northern California
Invasion dynamics of white-nose syndrome
fungus
Varying Exposure to a Pathogen Alters Disease
Severity and Resistance to Secondary Infection in
a Wild Bird
Environmental Reservoirs Of Antibiotic
Resistance Associated with Small Scale Poultry
Farming in Northwestern Ecuador
Evolutionary and ecological drivers of puma
lentivirus cross-species transmission
Trophic cascades as a result of Tasmanian Devil
facial tumor disease
The effects of coverage of the first and second
scheduled doses of measles vaccine on the
optimal age targets for measles vaccination
Measles as a major driver of all-cause childhood
mortality in Brazil
Partially observed wildlife epidemics: modeling
dolphin morbillivirus in the Northwestern Atlantic
17
47 Sahnzi Chow Moyers ([email protected]), James
Adelman, Damien Farine, Dana Hawley
48 Suzanne M. O'Regan ([email protected]),
John E. Vinson, Andrew W. Park
49 Colin Parrish ([email protected]), Kurtis Feng, Kai
Huang, Brian Wasik, Eddie Holmes
50 Juliet R.C. Pulliam ([email protected]), Alex Welte,
Steve E Bellan, Anthony G Hitchcock, Jonathan
Dushoff, ICI3D Program Faculty*; * The ICI3D
Program Faculty includes SEB, JD, JRCP, AW,
John W Hargrove, Travis C Porco, James C Scott,
and Brian G Williams
51 Michael A. Robert ([email protected]), Rebecca
C. Christofferson, Noah J. Silva, Christopher M.
Mores, Helen J. Wearing
52 Dora P. Rosati ([email protected]), Matthew
Woolhouse, Benjamin M. Bolker and David J.D.
Earn
Feeder use predicts both acquisition and
transmission of a contagious pathogen in a North
American songbird
Interspecific contact and competition may affect
the strength and direction of disease-diversity
relationships for directly transmitted
microparasites
Emergence and evolution of H3N8 and H3N2
canine influenza viruses.
Creating a Model World: An active-learning
approach to teaching dynamic modeling to
disease ecology and public health students
Modeling the potential for dengue and
chikungunya outbreaks in the Miami metropolitan
area
Song Popularity as a Contagious Process
53 Carly Rozins ([email protected]), Troy Day
Large industrial broiler farms can eliminate
Marek's disease by shortening cohort duration
54 Mauricio Seguel ([email protected]), F. Muñoz,
A. Keenan, E. Paredes, H. Pavés, R Schlatter, N.
Gottdenker
55 Lori Shapiro ([email protected]), Timothy
Straub, Mark Gleason, Gwyn Beattie, Roberto
Kolter, Naomi Pierce, Olga Zhaxybayeva
56 Marta Shocket ([email protected]), Spencer
Hall
Ecoimmunology of South American fur seal pups
(Arctocephalus australis) with hookworm
(Uncinaria sp.) infection
Rapid evolution of an emerging plant pathogen
57 Zhiyuan Song ([email protected]), James
Holland Jones
58 Sarah L. States ([email protected]), Matthew
Phelps, Tanner K. Steeves, Maria A. Diuk-Wasser
59 Christopher Stone ([email protected]),
Nakul Chitnis, Kevin Gross
60 Alexander T. Strauss ([email protected]),
Marta S. Shocket, Jessica L. Hite, David J. Civitello,
Rachel M. Penczykowski, Carla E. Caceres,
Meghan A. Duffy, Spencer R. Hall
Past & current temperature regulate transmission
in a zooplankton-fungus disease system with
seasonal epidemics
Habitat fragmentation may boost disease
transmission among red colobus monkeys by
changing demographic structure
Coinfection in the Lymelight: the Interactions of
Borrelia burgdorferi and Babesia microti in Ixodes
scapularis ticks
How do environmental influences on mosquito
foraging affect the evolution of behavioral
resistance?
Habitat, hosts, and fungus in the field:
Synthesizing hypotheses from the community
ecology of disease
18
61 Amy Sweeny ([email protected]), Michael
Grigg, Protozoal Pathogen Discovery Group
Protozoal population shifts across climate
gradients at the Arctic/ Subarctic interface
62 Leiling Tao ([email protected]), Mark D. Hunter,
Jacobus C. de Roode
Belowground organisms affect interactions
between monarch butterflies and their parasites
by altering host plant nutrition and defense
Interplay between metabolism and immunity
contributes to resistance and tolerance in transgenerationally primed insects
63 Ann T. Tate ([email protected]), A.L.
Graham
64 Madeline Tiee ([email protected]), Ryan Harrigan,
Henri Thomassen, Thomas Smith
Investigation into the historical
distribution, prevalence,
and host community of monkeypox virus (MPXV) us
ing Funisciurus museum skin specimens from
Central Africa
65 Kimberly Tsao ([email protected]), Stefan
Sellman, Michael Tildesley, Uno Wennergren,
Colleen Webb
66 Erin Allmann Updyke ([email protected]),
Brian F. Allan
67 Christina Pilar Varian ([email protected]), Azael
Saldana, Jose Calzada, Nicole Gottdenker
Improving performance of individual-level
stochastic disease simulations
68 Mafalda Viana ([email protected]),
Jason Mathiopoulos, Angela Hughes, Hilary
Ranson, Heather Ferguson
69 Andrew Wargo ([email protected]), Marc
Lipsitch, Gabriela Gomes, Greg Weins, Tim Leeds,
Gael Kurath
70 Zoemma Warshafsky ([email protected]),
Troy Tuckey, Wolfgang Vogelbein, Rob Latour,
Andrew Wargo
71 Mark Wilber ([email protected]), Cheryl J.
Briggs
72 Allison Williams ([email protected]), Katherine
Worsley-Tonks, Vanessa Ezenwa
73 Amy Winter ([email protected]), Santanu
Prahamanik, Justin Lessler, Bryan Grenfell, Jess
Metcalf
74 Laura Bloomfield ([email protected]), Ronan
Arthur, Ashley Hazel, James Holland Jones
Listed under Wednesday session (#7) in printed
program.
A preliminary eco-epidemiological survey of
Chagas disease in Panama
Influences of food web dynamics on multi-host
vector-borne diseases: Using Chagas disease as
a model system
Sub-lethal effects of insecticides: consequences
for malaria vector control
In vivo quantification of vaccine protection
heterogeneity
Impact of Anguillicoloides crassus on
Chesapeake Bay American Eels (Anguilla
rostrata)
A top-down approach for describing aggregation
in host-parasite systems: are aggregating
mechanisms necessary?
Variability in individual social relationships:
exploring causes and consequences
Rubella Vaccination in India: Identifying broad
consequences of vaccination introduction, key
knowledge gaps, and recommendations for
addressing them
Contributions of Agricultural Network Structures to
Zoonotic Transmission Potential in western
Uganda
19
HIKE – FRIDAY MAY 29, 2015
The annual hike will be held at Sandy Creek
Park, a popular choice for outdoor leisure
located very close to Athens.
Buses will pick up hike participants by 11:45am from the
UGA campus (see map to right). Return buses will arrive
around 4pm; one of the buses will return participants to
the Classic Center, and the other buses will drive to
Whitehall Forest for the closing BBQ.
Participants planning to attend closing BBQ should take the
bus from Sandy Creek to the BBQ site; there is no
transportation provided from downtown to BBQ.
Options at Sandy Creek Park:
Lakeside Trail: This trail follows the shore of Lake
Chapman, including the new Ellen R. Jordan bridge over
Sandy Creek. Hikers may return to their origin by
following the paved roadways back. This trail is of
moderate difficulty and takes approximately 3 hours to
complete. White blazes. Trail-heads: The first trailhead is at
the boat ramp parking lot located off Beech Tree Drive. A
second trailhead is located off Campsite Drive on the left
near the dam, park in the parking lot above and walk down
to meet the trail-head.
Cook's Trail: This greenway trail connects Sandy Creek
Park with Sandy Creek Nature Center, and runs creek-side
through woodlands and wetlands for over four miles (one
way; not a loop). The trail is mostly flat and good for
birdwatching. Return transportation from the Sandy Creek
Nature Center is not provided. If you choose to be dropped
off at the nature center, you MUST walk the trail to Sandy
Creek Park to catch the return buses.
Other activities – boats and disc golf: Too hot to hike in the
Georgia heat? Hang out in the pavilion and take a dip at the
beach. Boats (canoes, kayaks, and stand-up-paddleboards) also
will be available for rental. Rates are $5/hour for the first hour,
and $2/hour for subsequent hours. Sandy Creek also has a disc
golf course (extra fee).
See the following page for a map of Sandy Creek park trails
and important EEID meeting points.
20
21
VENUE
Most conference activities will take place at the Classic Center on Thomas St in
downtown Athens. Parking at the main Classic Center deck costs $1/hour up to a
maximum of $6 per visit.
The Firehall at the main entrance on Thomas Street is our venue for the Tuesday
evening welcome reception. Talks on Wednesday and Thursday will take place in the
Athena Ballroom, A-E, with the Poster Sessions in Athena Ballroom F. The Thursday
night banquet takes place in the Classic Center Atrium. These three venues are
outlined by thick rectangles in the map below.
22
DINING AROUND ATHENS
Athens is known for its rich offering of restaurants and bars, most locally owned and
inexpensive. The greatest concentration of restaurants and bars is found north of the
University between Broad and Prince Avenues. Five Points, at the intersection of Lumpkin
and Milledge Avenues, offers some excellent restaurants as well. Normaltown, west from
downtown on Prince, is an up-and-coming neighborhood with some great places to eat and
drink.
Lunch – arranged by distance from conference venue
Closest to the Classic Center:
Athens Bagel Company – A great option for bagels and sandwiches at breakfast or lunch.
Downtown on Jackson between Clayton and Washington. <$8
Mellow Mushroom – Located downtown, this pizzeria offers a wide-range of fun and
delcious toppings. Calzones and light snacks (and beer) are also available. Plenty of veggie
options! Downtown at 320 E. Clayton St. <$8
Barbaritos – With four Barbaritos throughout Athens, this local burrito joint is an Athens
favorite. The ingredients are fresh and tofu is available for vegetarians. Downtown at 259
Clayton St. (or in Five Points at 1739 S. Lumpkin St.). Lunch < $8.
Athens Wok – Shockingly good food for a restaurant with mixed Asian cuisines (Thai,
Japanese, and Chinese). Directly across from the conference venue on Clayton St., this will
make a quick and easy stop. Inexpensive lunch specials available, and everything can be
made vegetarian. <$8
Athens Sushi Bar Utage – Excellent sushi and traditional Japanese fare that is really
affordable. Downtown at 440 Clayton, near N. Thomas intersection. Lunch ~ $10.
A short (<10 minute) walk from the Classic Center:
The Rooftop at the Georgia Theater – Get a breath of fresh air atop one of the most
famous music venues in Athens. The menu is short but offers some great options for meateaters and vegetarians. Downtown at 215 N. Lumpkin St. ~$10
Ted’s Most Best – Excellent pizza and salads, with a great beer and wine selection. Ted’s
has a great outdoor seating area with a bocce court that’s most often used as a sandbox by
the toddler set, making this a great place for families with small children. But plenty of
grown-ups without children frequent Ted’s too! Downtown at 254 West Washington St.
~$10
Pouch – A brand new restaurant with a selection of inventive savory pies from around the
world. Pies cost around $5 and are plenty filling, especially with a side and a beer. Also
great for a late-night snack. Downtown at 151 E Broad St. ~$10
Yummy Pho – Delicious Vietnamese noodle bowls and Asian fare. Downtown at 167 E.
Broad St. ~$10
Taste of India –Good, inexpensive, gut bust’n potential [may sleep through afternoon
talks]. Easy access downtown at the intersection of Lumpkin and Broad. ~$10.
23
A short drive from the Classic Center:
Cali N Titos – Great Cuban and Mexican food in the Five Points area (5 minutes south of
downtown). Sandwiches, tacos, empanadas, etc… Seating inside and out. 1427 Lumpkin
Avenue. Lunch <$8 CASH ONLY!
Earth Fare – A grocery store with fresh and healthy options for the health-minded
shoppers. There is a buffet for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. In Five Points at 1689 S
Lumpkin St. ~$10
Hi-Lo – Very tasty hot dogs and sandwiches, with veggie alternatives for nearly every dish.
A great rotating menu of beers. ~$8. In Normaltown neighborhood (10 minutes west of
downtown), at 1354 Prince Ave.
Dinner (many of these suggestions are also great for lunch!)
$
The Grit – Athens’s best known vegetarian café. Great offering for all (non-vegetarians
love it, too!) and affordable. Best cakes in town…hands down. North end of downtown at
199 Prince Avenue. Dinner ~$15.
Clocked – How good do you have to be to make a great burger or fish sandwich, but be
best known for tater tots and macaroni and cheese? Retro atmosphere, limited seating.
Downtown at 259 Washington St. Dinner <$10.
Transmetropolitan – Very good pizzas, pastas and sandwiches. Great salads, too. Very
affordable. Great place to go Dutch because you pay first, sit and eat second. Bar upstairs!
Downtown at 145 Clayton, Dinner ~$10.
Thai Spoon – This eatery has a large menu with many, many delicious options (including
over 20 meat-free meals). Great Thai desserts. Overall, not too pricey. Located Downtown
at 145 North Lumpkin. Dinner ~$10-15.
Tlaloc El Mexicano – Authentic Mexican and Salvadoran fare at a great price, with very
friendly service and always a crowd. Recommended by Athens’s own celebrity chef Hugh
Acheson of Five & Ten fame. 1225 N Chase St. Dinner ~$10.
$$
Seabear Oyster Bar – A new seafood restaurant led by some of the best chefs in Athens.
Great happy hour food and beverage, with hot and cold seafood entrees and small plates.
Dinner ~$15.
Copper Creek – Local microbrewery and pub. Beers are solid, food is too. Traditional pub
fare. Can get a bison burger! If you’re in town on Tuesday, be sure to stop by for $2
Tuesday pints. Downtown at 140 Washington St. Entrees $8-$12.
Last Resort Grill – An Athens classic; great for lunch or dinner. Casual but a tad more
upscale at night. Dinner entrees $12-$20. Downtown at 174 Clayton Avenue.
Square One – Athens' only Florida/Caribbean style fresh seafood restaurant. Selections
include a raw bar, steamed starters, land fare and a wide range of seafood seared,
blackened, sauteed or fried. Veggie plate and salads also served. Downtown, next to the
convention center on Thomas Street.
24
$$$
The National – Delicious food with many Mediterranean-themed dishes. Prices are slightly
lower than Five and Ten. Located in downtown on W. Hancock Ave near intersection with
Hull. Dinner entrees $20-30. Also great (and more affordable) for lunch!
The Branded Butcher - A local restaurant focused on local and organic produce, pasture
raised meats, and the art of charcuterie. Despite their name, they have some great
vegetarian options! Open for dinner only. Located at 225 North Lumpkin St. downtown.
Entrees $14-30.
East-West Bistro – Upscale take on classic American and Asian fare. Nice dining
atmosphere. Downtown at 351 Broad Street. Dinner entrees $9-30.
Five & Ten – Arguably the best restaurant in Athens. It will cost you, but you’ll never
regret it. Located in Five Points at 1073 S Milledge Ave. Dinner entrees $16-35.
Coffee Shops
Walkers Coffee and Pub – Coffee shop by day, bar by night. Great local venue for coffee,
pastries, sandwiches, beer, wine, or liquor. Conveniently located Downtown on 128 College
Ave.
Jittery Joes (Five Points and Downtown) – Get your daily dose of locally roasted and
brewed Joe. Lots of delicious options to choose from. In Five Points at 1210 S. Milledge Ave
and downtown at 297 E. Broad St.
Two Story Coffeehouse – This relatively new coffeehouse has been a huge hit since its
doors opened in November 2009. As the name suggests, this is an old two-story house that
has been renovated into a coffee shop. It has great outdoor and indoor seating with several
cozy rooms to choose from. Two Story offers a great selection of specialty coffees, teas,
pastries, and gelato! Located in Five Points at 1680 Lumpkin St.
Hendershots – Hendershots is more than a coffee shop – they’re also a music venue with a
full bar and they serve lunch and dinner too – but they have great coffee and they’re open
early. It’s usually packed by 8 AM. Located in the Bottleworks at 237 Prince Ave.
Ike & Jane – This bakery and coffee shop serves breakfast and lunch every day, and
features amazing cupcakes and specialty donuts – check out the red velvet. Located in
Normaltown at 1307 Prince Ave.
Bars
Downtown:
The Globe – This English pub-style bar offers a wide range of drinks (80 beers – including
13 on tap, 66 wines, and 38 single malts). Great indoor seating with an upstairs loft for
extra space. Downtown at 199 N. Lumpkin St.
Trappeze – For folks who like beer, Trappeze is the place to go! This bar has 36 taps and
240 types of bottled beer. There is a pub-style menu with veggie options and delicious fries.
Located Downtown at 269 W. Washington St.
Manhattan – This dimly-lit townie bar provides a low-key and charming atmosphere.
Several beer and wine options, an extensive cocktail menu, and free popcorn. What more
could you ask for? Downtown at 337 N. Hull St.
25
Little Kings Shuffle Club – A graduate student favorite for after-hours activities. Little
Kings offers comfortable seating both indoors and out, great drinks, and free bar snacks
(gummy bears!). It is common for Little Kings to host bands or DJs – or even screen films.
Also – there’s a cornhole setup outside on the patio. Downtown on 223 W. Hancock Ave.
Copper Creek - Athens’s very own microbrewery. Good pub food (with veggie options) and
great home-made beer. There are domestic and import beers in addition to the in-house
brews. If you are in town for the workshop – be sure to stop by for $2 Tuesday.
Allgood Lounge – A straightforward bar with good beer selection and pool tables upstairs.
256 E. Clayton St.
Normaltown:
Normal Bar – This cozy local bar has outdoor seating, a dart board, and a nice selection of
beers, wines, and cocktails. You can also order pizza by the slice from the co-owned
Automatic Pizza next door. 1365 Prince Ave.
Hi-Lo – A great neighborhood bar with a rotating menu of excellent beers. 354 Prince Ave.
The Old Pal – Delicious, seasonal, high-falutin’ cocktails. Pricey by Athens standards but
Five Points:
The Royal Peasant – English pub with a small outdoor patio. They have a great beer
selection and serve lunch and dinner daily. Also a great place to catch a football, aka soccer,
match on the telly. 1675 S. Lumpkin St.
Other spots for Athens nightlife
Creature Comforts Brewery – Technically not a bar, but Athens’ newest microbrewery is
getting rave reviews nationally and is open for tours and tastings (~6 beers offered). Entry
costs $12 and gets you your own glass to take home and 6 tickets for generously-poured
beer samples. 271 W. Hancock Ave. Open Tuesday-Friday from 5-8 pm.
Go Bar – A fun and eclectic place to meet up for late-night dancing and/or karaoke.
Outdoor seating with an intimate indoor dance floor. The bar offers summery cocktails for
beating the Athens heat. Downtown at 195 Prince Ave.
Cine – This bar/café/cinema shows independent films while providing a wonderfully artsy
atmosphere. Cocktails, coffee drinks, and snacks are all allowed in the theatre – making an
overall excellent movie-going experience. Look for movie times at
http://www.athenscine.com/intro.php. Located Downtown on 243 W. Hancock Ave.
40 Watt Club – This small venue is a wonderful spot to check out the local Athens music
scene (as well as national bands and singers that commonly pass through). Nice bar inside
and plenty of space for dance parties. Located Downtown at 285 W. Washington St.
Flicker Theatre and Bar –This artsy bar is a townie favorite, and patrons can enjoy free
popcorn with their drinks while enjoying a movie or live music performance. Downtown at
263 W. Washington St.
Georgia Theatre – Primarily a music venue, the Georgia Theatre’s rooftop restaurant and
bar, operated by The Branded Butcher, offers one of the best views in Athens. The Rooftop
is open for lunch too. 215 North Lumpkin St. downtown.
26
MAPS & GETTING AROUND
The Bus (Athens Transit bus system): http://athenstransit.com/
 Adult fare is $1.60 one way with one free transfer
UGA Campus Transit: http://transit.uga.edu/Intersession
 Free, no ID required
 Will be running Intersession Schedule during the EEID meeting: check link above for
route information
UberX taxi service operates in Athens. Typical taxis are fairly unreliable and not strongly
recommended, but two options to call for pickup are United Taxi (706-549-0808) or Bulldog
Limousine (706-613-5206).
Map of downtown Athens, with conference venues and selected hotels as indicated:
27
LIST OF 2015 EEID CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Name
Institutional Affiliation
Email address
Henry Adams
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Alonso Aguirre
George Mason University
[email protected]
O. Alejandro Aleuy
University of Calgary
[email protected]
Kathleen Alexander
Virginia Tech
[email protected]
Laura Alexander
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Cristina Almeida
[email protected]
Karen Alroy
National Science Foundation
[email protected]
Sonia Altizer
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Monique Ambrose
University of California, Los Angeles
[email protected]
Caroline Amoroso
Duke University
[email protected]
Larissa Anderson
University of New Mexico
[email protected]
Janis Antonovics
University of Virginia
[email protected]
Nimalan Arinaminpathy
Imperial College London
[email protected]
Ronan Arthur
Stanford University
[email protected]
Zain Aryanpure
University of Georgia
Ben Ashby
University of Exeter
[email protected]
Noha Aziz
University of Idaho
[email protected]
Karoun Bagamian
University of Florida
[email protected]
Karen Bailey
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Laurie Baker
University of Glasgow
[email protected]
Kevin Bakker
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Jacob Ball
University of Florida
[email protected]
Bryan Ballif
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Seth Barribeau
East Carolina University
[email protected]
Paola Barriga
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Douglas Barron
University of South Florida
[email protected]
Sydney Barsko
University of Georgia
Lewis Bartlett
University of Exeter
[email protected]
Lindsay Beck-Johnson
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Daniel Becker
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Alexander Becker
Princeton University
[email protected]
Cassidy Becker
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Melissa Bell
[email protected]
Rotem Ben-Shachar
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Duke University
Ana Isabel Bento
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Meghan Bentz
University of Florida
[email protected]
Sofia Bertoloni Meli
University of Georgia
Nita Bharti
Penn State University
[email protected]
Amrita Bhattacharya
Indiana University Bloomington
[email protected]
Samit Bhattacharyya
Penn State University
[email protected]
[email protected]
28
Erica Billig
University of Pennsylvania
[email protected]
Ruthie Birger
Princeton University
[email protected]
Philip Birget
University of Edinburgh
[email protected]
Ottar Bjornstad
Penn State University
[email protected]
Gabriela Blohm
University of Florida
[email protected]
Laura Bloomfield
Stanford University
[email protected]
Michael Boots
University of Exeter
[email protected]
Rebecca Borchering
University of Florida
[email protected]
Brooke Borgert
University of Florida
[email protected]
Sarah Bowden
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Brooke Bozick
Emory University
[email protected]
Angela Brennan
Montana State University
[email protected]
Toby Brett
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Rachel Breyta
University of Washington, US
Geological Survey
University of Edinburgh
[email protected]
[email protected]
Berry Brosi
University of California, Santa
Barbara
Emory University
Charles Brower
BCG
[email protected]
Leone Brown
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Emme Bruns
University of Virginia
[email protected]
Sarah Budischak
Princeton University
[email protected]
Michael Buhnerkempe
University of California, Los Angeles
[email protected]
Ian Buller
Emory University
[email protected]
Sarah Burgan
University of South Florida
[email protected]
Annabelle Burnum
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Mary Bushman
Emory University
[email protected]
Sara Cahan
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Lexi Calderon
University of Georgia
Edwin Carbajal
[email protected]
Spencer Carran
Nat'l Institute of Allergies and
Infectious Diseases
Pennsylvania State University
Salvador Castellanos
Universidad de San Carlos
[email protected]
Ricardo Castillo-Neyra
University of Pennsylvania
[email protected]
Lilian Catenacci
Evandro Chagas Institute
[email protected]
Isabella Cattadori
The Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Quentin Caudron
Princeton University
[email protected]
David Champredon
McMaster University
[email protected]
Tina Cheng
University of California, Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Charles Y K Cheung
[email protected]
Elliott Chiu
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center
Colorado State University
Gerardo Chowell
Georgia State University
[email protected]
Carrie Cizauskas
Princeton University
[email protected]
Liam Brierley
Cherie Briggs
[email protected]
[email protected]
carran@psu
[email protected]
29
Nicholas Clark
[email protected]
Dan Colley
Griffith University, Queesnland,
Australia
University of Georgia
Emily Cornelius
University of Wisconsin-Madison
[email protected]
Meggan Craft
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Mick Crawley
Imperial College London
[email protected]
Justin Critchlow
Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Paul Cross
US Geological Survey
[email protected]
Katherine Cumnock
Stanford University
[email protected]
Tad Dallas
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Troy Day
Queen's University
[email protected]
Jaap De Roode
Emory University
[email protected]
Andre Dhondt
Cornell University
[email protected]
Chris Dibble
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Graziella Direnzo
University of Maryland
[email protected]
Maria Diuk-Wasser
Columbia University
[email protected]
Andy Dobson
Princeton University
[email protected]
Matthieu Domenech De
Celles
Patricia Dorn
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Loyola University New Orleans
[email protected]
John Drake
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Jonathan Dushoff
McMaster University
[email protected]
David Earn
McMaster University
[email protected]
Gillian Eastwood
University of Texas Medical Branch
[email protected]
Ceyhun Eksin
Georgia Tech University
[email protected]
Bret Elderd
Louisiana State University
[email protected]
Helen Esser
[email protected]
Veronique Etienne
Wageningen University, the
Netherlands
University of Florida
Michelle Evans
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Vanessa Ezenwa
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Max Farrell
McGill University
[email protected]
Christina Faust
Princeton University
[email protected]
Andy Fenton
University of Liverpool
[email protected]
Paige Ferguson
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
[email protected]
Adam Ferguson
Smithsonian Institution
[email protected]
Matthew Ferrari
Penn State
[email protected]
Nicholas Fountain-Jones
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
David Friedman
The Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Kristina Frogoso
University of Georgia
Victoria Frost
Winthrop University
[email protected]
Zach Gajewski
Virginia Tech
[email protected]
Meghan Gallaspy
Loyola University New Orleans
[email protected]
Nathan Galloway
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Andres Garchitorena
Harvard Medical School
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
30
Allison Gardner
[email protected]
Romain Garnier
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Princeton University
Alyssa Gehman
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Stephanie Gervasi
University of South Florida
[email protected]
Ria Ghai
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Suma Ghosh
Penn State University
[email protected]
Amanda Gibson
Indiana University
[email protected]
John Giles
Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia
[email protected]
Thomas Gillespie
[email protected]
Jasmine Gipson
Emory University & Rollins School of
Public Health
University of Georgia
Katey Glunt
Penn State
[email protected]
Erin Gorsich
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Katie Gostic
UCLA
[email protected]
Nicole Gottdenker
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Camden Gowler
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Andrea Graham
Princeton University
[email protected]
Megan Greischar
University of Toronto
[email protected]
Bryan Grenfell
Princeton University
Ashton Griffin
University of Georgia
[email protected]
[email protected]
Kevin Gross
North Carolina State Univ
[email protected]
Marissa Grossman
Emory University
[email protected]
Christian Gunning
NCSU
[email protected]
Cylita Elizabeth Guy
University of Toronto
[email protected]
Richard Hall
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Mary Halpin
Kent State University
[email protected]
Sarah Hamer
Texas A&M Univeristy
[email protected]
Barbara Han
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
[email protected]
Rachel Hanauer
Indiana University
[email protected]
Andreas Handel
University of Georgia
[email protected]
John Hanley
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Carlie Harding
Penn State University
[email protected]
Laura Harrington
Cornell University
[email protected]
Erica Harris
Emory University
[email protected]
Eric Harvill
Penn State
[email protected]
Sarah Hatcher
[email protected]
Matthew Heard
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Winthrop University
Sarah Helman
UCLA
[email protected]
Karsten Hempel
McMaster University
[email protected]
Sonia Hernandez
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Jessica Hite
Indiana University
[email protected]
Zachary Holmes
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
31
Tyla Holsomback
Texas Tech University
[email protected]
Robert Hood
The University of Georgia
[email protected]
Meghan Howard
NCSU
[email protected]
Joseph Hoyt
University of California, Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Peter Hudson
Penn State
[email protected]
Paul Hurtado
University of Nevada, Reno
[email protected]
Nathan Jacobs
Emory University
[email protected]
Jaewoon Jeong
Griffith University
[email protected]
James Jones
Stanford University
[email protected]
Taylor Joseph
University of Georgia
Silvia Justi
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Pauline Kamath
U.S. Geological Survey
[email protected]
Surendra Karki
[email protected]
Rajreni Kaul
University of Illinois, Urbana
Champaign
University of Georgia
Ruian Ke
Los Alamos National Laboratory
[email protected]
Aubree Kelly
[email protected]
David Kennedy
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Penn State
Carolyn Keogh
University of Georgia
[email protected]
A. Marm Kilpatrick
University of California, Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Aaron King
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Katia Koelle
Duke University
[email protected]
Tony Kovach
University of California Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Andrew Kramer
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Duncan Krause
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Shannon Ladeau
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
[email protected]
Kate Langwig
University of California Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Neus Latorre-Margalef
The University of Georgia
[email protected]
Brian Lazzaro
Cornell University
[email protected]
Margie D. Lee
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Ariel Leon
Virginia Tech
[email protected]
Michael Levy
University of Pennsylvania
[email protected]
Karen Levy
Emory University, Rollins School of
Public Health
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Raquel Asuncian Lima
Cordan
Evans Lodge
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
University of Georgia
Ana V. Longo
Cornell University
[email protected]
Angela Luis
University of Montana
[email protected]
Andrea Lund
Emory University
[email protected]
Penelope Lynch
University of Exeter
[email protected]
Andrew Macdonald
[email protected]
Felicia Magpantay
University of California, Santa
Barbara
University of Michigan
Ayesha Mahmud
Princeton University
[email protected]
[email protected]
32
Jennifer Malmberg
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Katherine Marchetto
Cornell University
[email protected]
Lynn Martin
University of South Florida
[email protected]
Micaela Martinez-Bakker
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Hamish Mccallum
Griffith University
[email protected]
Taylor Mcclanahan
University of Georgia
Alexa Mckay
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Amalie Mckee
the Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Clifton Mckee
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Joseph Mcmillan
Emory University
[email protected]
C. Jessica E. Metcalf
Princeton University
[email protected]
Michael Mina
Emory
[email protected]
Amanda Minter
University of Liverpool
[email protected]
Charles Mitchell
[email protected]
Nardus Mollentze
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
University of Glasgow
Lillian Moller-Jacobs
Penn State University
[email protected]
Carlota Monroy
Universidad de San Carlos
[email protected]
Sean Moore
[email protected]
Erin Mordecai
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health
Stanford
Levi Morran
Emory University
[email protected]
Sinead Morris
Princeton University
[email protected]
Sahnzi Moyers
Virginia Tech
[email protected]
Riley Mummah
The Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Claudia Munoz-Zanzi
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Courtney Murdock
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Trieste Musial
Emory University
[email protected]
Maya Nadimpalli
[email protected]
Calistus Ngonghala
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Harvard Medical School
Navideh Noori
Auburn University
[email protected]
Nicole Nova
Duke University
[email protected]
Charles Nunn
Duke
[email protected]
Kayleigh O'Keeffe
UNC-Chapel Hill
[email protected]
Suzanne O'Regan
University of Tennessee
[email protected]
Tim O'Sullivan
Emory University
[email protected]
Jo Ohm
Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Sarah Olson
Wildlife Conservation Society
[email protected]
Lucia Orantes
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Irena Papst
McMaster University
[email protected]
Andrew Park
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Patricia Parker
University of Missouri - St. louis
[email protected]
Colin Parrish
Cornell University
[email protected]
Carl Pearson
University of Florida
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
33
Amy Pedersen
University of Edinburgh
amy.pedersen@
Mckenna Penley
Emory
[email protected]
Rafaela Pessoa
Loyola University New Orleans
[email protected]
Jennifer Peterson
Princeton University
[email protected]
Kelly Pierce
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Raina Plowright
Montana State University
[email protected]
Laura Pollitt
University of Edinburgh
[email protected]
Laura Pomeroy
The Ohio State University
[email protected]
Sunny Power
Cornell University
[email protected]
Joaquin Prada
Princeton University
[email protected]
Katherine Prager
UCLA
[email protected]
William Probert
The Pennsylvania State University
[email protected]
Juliet Pulliam
Emerging Pathogens Institute
[email protected]
Fidisoa Rasambainarivo
University of Missouri Saint Louis
[email protected]
Sandeep Ravindran
Freelance
[email protected]
Les Real
Emory University
[email protected]
Colbie Reed
Penn State University
[email protected]
Roland Regoes
ETH Zurich
[email protected]
Sarah Rhodes
[email protected]
Ana Carolina Ribeiro Gomez
UNC Chapel Hill- School of Public
Health
UCLA
Robert Richards
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Katherine Richgels
University of Wisconsin
[email protected]
Cassidy Rist
Emory University
[email protected]
Donna Rizzo
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Michael Robert
University of New Mexico
[email protected]
Benjamin Roche
IRD
[email protected]
Pejman Rohani
university of michigan
[email protected]
Dora Rosati
McMaster University
[email protected]
Sam Rosenthal
Brown University
[email protected]
Jessica Rowland
University of Florida
[email protected]
Carly Rozins
Queen's University
[email protected]
Diego Ruiz Moreno
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Julie Rushmore
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Jordan Ruybal
University of California, Santa Cruz
[email protected]
Sadie Ryan
University of Florida
[email protected]
Evelyn Rynkiewicz
University of Edinburgh
[email protected]
Loren Sackett
Smithsonian Institution
[email protected]
Benjamin Sadd
Illinois State University
[email protected]
Samuel Scarpino
Santa Fe Institute
[email protected]
Annakate Schatz
University of Georgia
Sam Scheiner
National Science Foundation
Anna Schneider
University of Georgia
[email protected]
[email protected]
34
Stacy Scholle
Duke University
[email protected]
Mauricio Seguel
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Lori Shapiro
Harvard
[email protected]
Allison Shaw
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Marta Shocket
Indiana University
[email protected]
Samuel Slowinski
Indiana University
[email protected]
David Smith
University of Toronto
[email protected]
Alex Smith
University of Michigan
[email protected]
Ashley Sobel
Duke University
[email protected]
Nicole Solano
University of Georgia
Elizabeth Solorzano
Universidad Austral de Chile
[email protected]
Zhiyuan Song
Stanford University
[email protected]
Erica Spackman
Southeast Poultry Reseach Lab
[email protected]
Laurie Spencer
Northern Illinois University
[email protected]
Andrea Springer
German Primate Center
[email protected]
Sarah States
Columbia University
[email protected]
Patrick Stephens
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Eleanore Sternberg
Penn State University
[email protected]
Lori Stevens
University of Vermont
[email protected]
Jill Stewart
University of North Carolina
[email protected]
Anna Stewart Ibarra
SUNY Upstate Medical University
[email protected]
Chris Stone
NCSU
[email protected]
Alexander Strauss
Indiana University
[email protected]
Daniel Streicker
University of Glasgow
[email protected]
Amy Sweeny
[email protected]
Saki Takahashi
Nat'l Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases, NIH
Princeton University
Leiling Tao
Emory University
[email protected]
Ann Tate
University of Houston
[email protected]
Bradford Taylor
Georgia Institute of Technology
[email protected]
Matthew Thomas
Penn State
[email protected]
Courtney Thomason
Virginia Tech
[email protected]
Madeline Tiee
University of California-Los Angeles
[email protected]
Dominic Travis
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Luke Trimmer-Smith
University of Florida
[email protected]
Kimberly Tsao
Colorado State University
[email protected]
Tate Tunstall
University of Maryland
[email protected]
Wendy Turner
University of Oslo
[email protected]
Robert Unckless
Cornell University
[email protected]
Erin Updyke
[email protected]
Kurt Vandegrift
University of Illinois Urbana
Champaign
Penn State University
Kimberly Vanderwaal
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Christina Varian
University of Georgia
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
35
Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec
Emory University
[email protected]
Mafalda Viana
University of Glasgow
[email protected]
Cecile Viboud
National Institutes of Health
[email protected]
John Vinson
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Alexis Wait
The University of Michigan
[email protected]
Nina Wale
Penn State University
[email protected]
Katharine Walter
Yale University
[email protected]
Andrew Wargo
[email protected]
Zoemma Warshafsky
Virginia Institute of Marine Science,
W&M
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Helen Wearing
University of New Mexico
[email protected]
Joshua Weitz
Georgia Institute of Technology
[email protected]
Erin Welsh
[email protected]
Amy Wesolowski
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
Harvard School of Public Health
Signe White
Emory University
[email protected]
Lauren White
University of Minnesota
[email protected]
Shelley Whitehead
Penn State University
[email protected]
Alexandra Wickson
University of Georgia
Mark Wilber
[email protected]
Tim Wildauer
University of California, Santa
Barbara
University of Georgia
Allison Williams
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Richard Williams
University of Georgia
Amy Winter
Princeton University
[email protected]
Adrienne Woods
Loyola University New Orleans
[email protected]
Katherine Worsley-Tonks
University of Georgia
[email protected]
Kelly Zamudio
National Science Foundation
[email protected]
ztwarshafsky
[email protected]
36