Symposium program - Institute for Disease Modeling
Transcription
Symposium program - Institute for Disease Modeling
IDM is pleased to announce that our 3rd Annual Modeling Symposium will take place 20 April – 22 April at the centrally located Hyatt Regency in Bellevue, Washington. We have changed hotel locations this year to accommodate additional sessions while still offering the same great location in the heart of downtown Bellevue. If you need hotel accommodations please register at the dedicated Hyatt website by March 23, 2015. The goal of this symposium is simple – to further collaborations for modeling strategies in the eradication and control of disease. Day 1, Developer Insights, offers the opportunity to understand EMOD, IDM’s flagship disease modeling software, or to explore COMPS, your research productivity toolkit. We are actively looking for collaborators to participate in our early adopter COMPS program. Please note that this all-day session will be taking place at IDM’s offices in Bellevue. Days 2 and 3, Modeling Insights, will target the core of our disease modeling mission by focusing on the intersection of data and modeling as applied to global health. We have changed the format of this year’s symposium to expand the number of talks from our collaborators. We welcome Simon Hay from Oxford/IHME for our plenary session. Over these two days, we will be looking at careful model construction, calibration, and understanding the counterfactual and uncertainties within modeling. We will also be looking at how to address these issues with exciting new developments in data, ranging from spatial variation in case counts, human migration, genetic data, and more. There will be a special focus on spatial analysis for global health programs. The full two-day schedule will incorporate break-out sessions on VPDs, malaria, NIDS, HIV, TB, and enteric infections. We are pleased and grateful for your interest and participation in this event and welcome the opportunity to continue to facilitate collaborations in addressing these key topics and aiding in the global fight against disease. For more information see www.idmod.org. IDM Symposium – Day 1 Developer Insights The IDM software team is hosting a full day of dedicated software tracks Monday, April 20th, 2015 at our offices in Bellevue, 1555 132nd Ave NE. Please contact [email protected] for any questions. IDM Offices, Monday 4/20/2015 Symposium Developer Focused Tracks 7:30am-8am 8am-5pm 8am-11:30pm IDM, Newton, Archimedes Conf Room Breakfastand Registration Please join us for a continental breakfast outside the Archimedes conference room. IDM, da Vinci, Bernoulli Conf Room COMPS Essentials All-day session focused on the COMPS services. COMPS delivers the essential tools used for infectious disease modeling. This workshop is designed to showcase the benefits of COMPS and enable groups to join the early adopter program. IDM, Newton, Archimedes Conf Room Introduction to the EMOD Software This session is intended to take a participant from the Quick Start installation to their own custom configured simulation. If you’d like help addressing installation to running simulations, this workshop is designed for you. Upon completion of this session, the participant will be capable of looking at a simulation (a config.json and campaign.json) and "making basic sense of it." The participant will be able to reconfigure an existing simulation using parameters within the Generic model. Lunches will be provided from 11:30am-1pm outside the Archimedes conference room, Newton building. 1pm-5pm IDM, Newton, Archimedes Conf Room Beyond Homogeneous Mixing (HINT and Spatial) Whether you’re new to the EMOD software or have used it for a while, it’s time to go beyond the uniform, single geography model and explore heterogeneous mixing (HINT) and the mixing of geographically distributed populations (spatial). This presentation will review the default homogeneous mixing model of EMOD and introduce the HINT and spatial modeling features as well as the input files for controlling the features and the tools for generating the appropriate input files. The material covered in this session will enable users to create powerful simulations that model the heterogeneities of the real world where different population subgroups have different probabilities of infecting each other. IDM Symposium- Days 2 and 3 Disease Modeling Sessions The scientific sessions for this year’s symposium will focus on the intersection of data and modeling as applied to global health. We will be looking at careful model construction, calibration, understanding the counterfactual and uncertainty, and how to address these issues with the exciting new developments in data, ranging from spatial variation in case counts, human migration, genetic data, and more. There will be a special focus on spatial analyses—the questions from programs, the data required to address these questions, how to improve scientific rigor around spatial models, to development of accessory tools to simplify analyses. Spatial analyses for global health programs will have a special focus on outreach with breakout sessions planned on polio and other vaccine preventable diseases, HIV and TB, and malaria and neglected infectious diseases. Hyatt Regency, Tuesday 4/21/2015 IDM Symposium Disease Modeling 7am-8am Cedar Ballroom Breakfast and Registration Please join us for a fully staffed breakfast buffet outside the Cedar Ballroom. 8:15am-8:30am Cedar Ballroom Welcome Note 3rd Annual IDM Symposium 8:30am-10:30am Cedar Ballroom General Session 1 (Chair: Philip Eckhoff) Edward Wenger, IDM Rein Houben, LSHTM Tom Smith, Swiss TPH Sarah Volkman, Harvard/Broad 10:30am-11:00am Coffee Break Feedback? Visit the Birch Room to provide feedback and your insights on the EMOD software and documentation. 11:00am-12:00pm Cedar Ballroom Plenary Simon Hay, Oxford/IHME 12:00pm-1:00pm Lunch at Eques With its casual Northwest décor and a creative menu, Eques serves a fresh and contemporary buffet seven days a week using high-quality, locally-sourced seasonal ingredients. Hyatt Regency, Tuesday 4/21/2015 (continued) 1:00pm-3:00pm Cedar Ballroom Malaria/NIDs (Chair: Dan Hartl) Adam Bennett, UCSF Bryan Greenhouse, UCSF Rachel Daniels, Harvard/Broad Melissa Penny, Swiss TPH Caitlin Bever, IDM Alex Upfill-Brown, IDM Birch Ballroom HIV/TB—HIV Cascade of Care (Chair: Geoff Garnett) Geoff Garnett, BMGF Anna Bershteyn, IDM Tim Wolock, IHME Ruanne Barnabas, UW Elvin Geng, UCSF Daniel Klein, IDM Balsam Ballroom VPDs—Enteric Infections (Chair: Kurt Long) Kurt Long, Swiss TPH Hao Hu, IDM Laura Matrajt, Hutch Hmwe Kyu, IHME Duncan Steele and Zoey Diaz, BMGF Basil Bayati, IDM 3:00am-3:30am Coffee Break Feedback? Visit the Birch Room to provide feedback and your insights on the EMOD software and documentation. 3:30am-4:30pm Cedar Ballroom General Session 2 (Chair: Tom Burkot) Tom Burkot, VECNet, James Cook University Betz Halloran, Fred Hutch 6:00pm-8:00pm Dinner at Daniel's Broiler, Bellevue Place Complex Please come join us for an exceptional and elegant dinner hosted by IDM. Hyatt Regency, Wednesday 4/22/2015 IDM Symposium Disease Modeling 7am-8:15am Cedar Ballroom Breakfast Cedar Ballroom General Session 3 (Chair: Pete Gething) 10:00am-10:30am Coffee Break Feedback? Visit the Birch Room to provide feedback and your insights on the EMOD software and documentation. 10:30am-12:00pm Cedar Ballroom General Session 4 (Chair: Steve Kern) 8:30am-10:00am 12:00pm-1:00pm 1:00pm-3:00pm 3:15pm-5:00pm Please join us for a fully staffed breakfast buffet outside the Cedar Ballroom. Pete Gething, Oxford Greg Madey, Notre Dame Kevin McCarthy, IDM Dave Smith, Oxford Alex Perkins, Notre Dame Steve Kern, BMGF Lunch Cedar Ballroom Cedar Ballroom Breakout: Malaria/NIDs 2 Birch Ballroom Breakout: HIV/TB 2 (Chair: Rein Houben) Balsam Ballroom Breakout: Measles, Polio, Meningitis (Chair: Chris Wolff) Cedar Ballroom Creating Custom Reports for EMOD David Wesche, BMGF Jaline Gerardin, IDM Andre Lin Ouedraogo, IDM Gillian Stresman, LSHTM UC-Irvine talk Natalie Meyers, Notre Dame Rein Houben, LSHTM Dave Hermann, BMGF Sze Suen, Stanford Bradley Wagner, IDM Grace Huynh, IDM James Goodson, CDC Matt Ferrari, Penn State Nita Bharti, Stanford Isobel Blake, Imperial College London Hil Lyons, IDM Fabien Diomande, CDC The Disease Transmission Kernel (DTK) has a number of built-in “reports” for analysis. However, the built-in reports may not extract the data you need, so this is where a custom report is necessary. This session will review the built-in reports and then guide you through the steps for extracting your custom data. This session assumes you are familiar with the DTK and have experience with C++ and Microsoft’s Visual Studio. Please bring your Windows laptop with the V1.8 DTK source code already installed and building.