ASU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.
In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.
Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.
- Arizona State University
- Castillo-Chavez, Carlos
- 9 Kang, Yun
- 7 Mubayi, Anuj
- 4 Towers, Sherry
- 3 Chowell-Puente, Gerardo
- 2 Anderies, John M
- more
- 2 Janssen, Marcus A
- 2 Kuang, Yang
- 2 Li, Jiaxu
- 2 Nagy, John
- 2 Platte, Rodrigo
- 2 Suslov, Sergei
- 2 Wirkus, Stephen
- 1 Anderson, Karen S
- 1 Aparicio, Juan P
- 1 Baer, Steven
- 1 Baer, Steven M
- 1 Barley, Kamal Kevin
- 1 Blattman, Joseph N
- 1 Bliss, Nadya Travinin
- 1 Boone, Christopher
- 1 Burkow, Daniel Harrison
- 1 Camacho, Erika
- 1 Camacho, Erika T
- 1 Camacho, Erika T.
- 1 Carlson, Marilyn P.
- 1 Castaneda, Edward
- 1 Chowell, Diego
- 1 Collins, James
- 1 Cordero-Soto, Ricardo Javier
- 1 Crook, Sharon
- 1 Crook, Sharon M
- 1 Cruz-Aponte, Maytee
- 1 Degrandi-Hoffman, Gloria D
- 1 Edme, Soho
- 1 Engman, Martin
- 1 Evangelista, Arlene Morales
- 1 Feng, Zhilan
- 1 Fewell, Jennifer H
- 1 Frasch, Wayne
- 1 Gardner, Carl
- 1 Gonzalez, Beverly
- 1 Greenwood, Priscilla E
- 1 Herrera-Valdez, Marco
- 1 Hiebeler, David
- 1 Hogue, Brenda
- 1 Holechek, Susan
- 1 Holechek, Susan Anthoanet
- 1 Holmes, Raquell M
- 1 Hruschka, Daniel
- 1 Hurtado, Ana Magdalena
- 1 Jackson, Trachette L.
- 1 Jacobs, Bertram L
- 1 Kareva, Irina
- 1 Lage Ramírez, Ana Elisa
- 1 Lampert, Adam
- 1 Laubichler, Manfred
- 1 Lee, Sunmi
- 1 Lopez, Raquel
- 1 Luli, Dori
- 1 Maley, Carlo C
- 1 Mamada, Robert Hideo
- 1 Manning, Miles
- 1 Messan, Komi Segno
- 1 Middleton, James A.
- 1 Morale Butler, Emmanuel Jesús
- 1 Morales-Rosado, Romarie
- 1 Moreno Martinez, Victor Manuel
- 1 Morin, Benjamin Richard
- 1 Murillo, Anarina
- 1 Murillo, David
- 1 Nazari, Fereshteh
- 1 Nesse, Hans P
- 1 Nuno, Miriam
- 1 Page Jr., Robert E
- 1 Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia
- 1 Patterson-Lomba, Oscar
- 1 Perrings, Charles
- 1 Phillips, Elizabeth D
- 1 Radunskaya, Ami
- 1 Rodriguez Messan, Marisabel
- 1 Safan, Muntaser
- 1 Saldanha, Luis
- 1 Sinakevitch, Irina T.
- 1 Smith, Adrian Nicholas
- 1 Smith, Brian
- 1 Smith, Brian H.
- 1 Smith, Hal
- 1 Stout, Valerie
- 1 Sulov, Sergei K
- 1 Summer, Ilyssa
- 1 Suslov, Sergei K
- 1 Tello-Bravo, David
- 1 Thompson, Patrick W.
- 1 Torres-Garcia, Griselle
- 1 Udiani, Oyita Udiani
- 1 Urdapilleta, Alicia
- 1 Vega-Guzman, Jose M.
- 1 Wang, Xiaohong
- 34 English
- 34 Public
- 25 Applied mathematics
- 5 Epidemiology
- 5 Mathematics
- 4 Biology
- 3 Applied Mathematics
- 3 Ecology
- 3 Statistics
- more
- 2 Dengue
- 2 Division of labor
- 2 Immunology
- 2 Influenza
- 2 Ordinary Differential Equations
- 2 Quantum physics
- 1 AH1N1
- 1 Adaptive behavior
- 1 Age Structure
- 1 Anthroponotic Visceral Leishmaniasis
- 1 Basic Reproductive Number
- 1 Biostatistics
- 1 Burgers Equation
- 1 Cancer evolution
- 1 Cancer immunology
- 1 Cannibalism
- 1 Cocaine
- 1 Collaboration
- 1 Combination Treatment
- 1 Community development
- 1 Cooperation
- 1 Cournot competition
- 1 Creativity
- 1 Cultural anthropology
- 1 Damped Oscillators
- 1 Dendritic Cell Vaccine
- 1 Diabetes
- 1 Diffusion equation
- 1 Dopamine
- 1 Dopamine Transporter
- 1 Drug Resistance
- 1 Drug resistance
- 1 E3L
- 1 Economic theory
- 1 Epidemic Models
- 1 Extracellular Space
- 1 Green's Function
- 1 Higher education
- 1 Higher education in STEM
- 1 Holzman's metaphor of becoming
- 1 Honeybees
- 1 Hunter-gatherers
- 1 Immune system
- 1 Immunotherapy
- 1 Infectious Disease Epidemiology
- 1 Infectious disease transmission
- 1 Inhibition
- 1 Interferon
- 1 Key Developmental Understandings
- 1 Key Pedagogical Understandings
- 1 Leafcutter ants
- 1 Leishmania donovani
- 1 Malaria
- 1 Markov Chains
- 1 Mathematical Biology
- 1 Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching
- 1 Mathematical epidemiology
- 1 Mathematical modeling
- 1 Mathematics Education
- 1 Mathematics education
- 1 Metapopulation
- 1 Migration
- 1 Modeling
- 1 Molecular biology
- 1 Neurosciences
- 1 Nonclassical states
- 1 Numerical analysis
- 1 Oncology
- 1 Oncolytic Virus
- 1 Optimal Control
- 1 Optimal control
- 1 Parameter Estimation or inverse problem
- 1 Pedagogical Content Knowledge
- 1 Physics
- 1 Post-exposure
- 1 Poxvirus
- 1 Public health
- 1 Quadratic Hamiltonian
- 1 Quantum Optics
- 1 Reinforcement learning
- 1 Response-thresholds
- 1 SARS
- 1 STDs
- 1 Scaling
- 1 Schrodinguer equation
- 1 Schrödinger Equation
- 1 Size Structure
- 1 Social Insects
- 1 Social dynamics
- 1 Social networks
- 1 Squeezed states
- 1 Stochastic Processes
- 1 Stochastic modeling
- Dwarf Galaxies as Laboratories of Protogalaxy Physics: Canonical Star Formation Laws at Low Metallicity
- Evolutionary Genetics of CORL Proteins
- Social Skills and Executive Functioning in Children with PCDH-19
- Deep Domain Fusion for Adaptive Image Classification
- Software Defined Pulse-Doppler Radar for Over-The-Air Applications: The Joint Radar-Communications Experiment
Dopamine (DA) is a neurotransmitter involved in attention, goal oriented behavior, movement, reward learning, and short term and working memory. For the past four decades, mathematical and computational modeling approaches have been useful in DA research, and although every modeling approach has limitations, a model is an efficient way to generate and explore hypotheses. This work develops a model of DA dynamics in a representative, single DA neuron by integrating previous experimental, theoretical and computational research. The model consists of three compartments: the cytosol, the vesicles, and the extracellular space and forms the basis of a new mathematical paradigm for …
- Contributors
- Tello-Bravo, David, Crook, Sharon M, Greenwood, Priscilla E, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Olfaction is an important sensory modality for behavior since odors inform animals of the presence of food, potential mates, and predators. The fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is a favorable model organism for the investigation of the biophysical mechanisms that contribute to olfaction because its olfactory system is anatomically similar to but simpler than that of vertebrates. In the Drosophila olfactory system, sensory transduction takes place in olfactory receptor neurons housed in the antennae and maxillary palps on the front of the head. The first stage of olfactory processing resides in the antennal lobe, where the structural unit is the glomerulus. …
- Contributors
- Luli, Dori, Crook, Sharon, Baer, Steven, et al.
- Created Date
- 2013
A key factor in the success of social animals is their organization of work. Mathematical models have been instrumental in unraveling how simple, individual-based rules can generate collective patterns via self-organization. However, existing models offer limited insights into how these patterns are shaped by behavioral differences within groups, in part because they focus on analyzing specific rules rather than general mechanisms that can explain behavior at the individual-level. My work argues for a more principled approach that focuses on the question of how individuals make decisions in costly environments. In Chapters 2 and 3, I demonstrate how this approach provides …
- Contributors
- Udiani, Oyita Udiani, Kang, Yun, Fewell, Jennifer H, et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
In the field of infectious disease epidemiology, the assessment of model robustness outcomes plays a significant role in the identification, reformulation, and evaluation of preparedness strategies aimed at limiting the impact of catastrophic events (pandemics or the deliberate release of biological agents) or used in the management of disease prevention strategies, or employed in the identification and evaluation of control or mitigation measures. The research work in this dissertation focuses on: The comparison and assessment of the role of exponentially distributed waiting times versus the use of generalized non-exponential parametric distributed waiting times of infectious periods on the quantitative and …
- Contributors
- Morale Butler, Emmanuel Jesús, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, Aparicio, Juan P, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
In the honey bee antennal lobe, uniglomerular projection neurons (uPNs) transiently spike to odor sensory stimuli with odor-specific response latencies, i.e., delays to first spike after odor stimulation onset. Recent calcium imaging studies show that the spatio-temporal response profile of the activated uPNs are dynamic and changes as a result of associative conditioning, facilitating odor-detection of learned odors. Moreover, odor-representation in the antennal lobe undergo reward-mediated plasticity processes that increase response delay variations in the activated ensemble of uniglomerular projection neurons. Octopamine is necessarily involved in these plasticity processes. Yet, the cellular mechanisms are not well understood. I hypothesize that …
- Contributors
- Smith, Adrian Nicholas, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, Sinakevitch, Irina T., et al.
- Created Date
- 2016
The Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Institute (MTBI) is a summer research program for undergraduate students, largely from underrepresented minority groups. Founded in 1996, it serves as a 'life-long' mentorship program, providing continuous support for its students and alumni. This study investigates how MTBI supports student development in applied mathematical research. This includes identifying of motivational factors to pursue and develop capacity to complete higher education. The theoretical lens of developmental psychologists Lev Vygotsky (1978, 1987) and Lois Holzman (2010) that sees learning and development as a social process is used. From this view student development in MTBI is attributed to …
- Contributors
- Evangelista, Arlene Morales, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, Holmes, Raquell M, et al.
- Created Date
- 2015
A sequence of models is developed to describe urban population growth in the context of the embedded physical, social and economic environments and an urban disease are developed. This set of models is focused on urban growth and the relationship between the desire to move and the utility derived from city life. This utility is measured in terms of the economic opportunities in the city, the level of human constructed amenity, and the level of amenity caused by the natural environment. The set of urban disease models is focused on examining prospects of eliminating a disease for which a vaccine …
- Contributors
- Murillo, David, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, Anderies, John M, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
This dissertation is intended to tie together a body of work which utilizes a variety of methods to study applied mathematical models involving heterogeneity often omitted with classical modeling techniques. I posit three cogent classifications of heterogeneity: physiological, behavioral, and local (specifically connectivity in this work). I consider physiological heterogeneity using the method of transport equations to study heterogeneous susceptibility to diseases in open populations (those with births and deaths). I then present three separate models of behavioral heterogeneity. An SIS/SAS model of gonorrhea transmission in a population of highly active men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM) is presented to study the impact of …
- Contributors
- Morin, Benjamin Richard, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, Hiebeler, David, et al.
- Created Date
- 2012
Mathematical modeling of infectious diseases can help public health officials to make decisions related to the mitigation of epidemic outbreaks. However, over or under estimations of the morbidity of any infectious disease can be problematic. Therefore, public health officials can always make use of better models to study the potential implication of their decisions and strategies prior to their implementation. Previous work focuses on the mechanisms underlying the different epidemic waves observed in Mexico during the novel swine origin influenza H1N1 pandemic of 2009 and showed extensions of classical models in epidemiology by adding temporal variations in different parameters that …
- Contributors
- Cruz-Aponte, Maytee, Wirkus, Stephen A., Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, et al.
- Created Date
- 2014
Diseases have been part of human life for generations and evolve within the population, sometimes dying out while other times becoming endemic or the cause of recurrent outbreaks. The long term influence of a disease stems from different dynamics within or between pathogen-host, that have been analyzed and studied by many researchers using mathematical models. Co-infection with different pathogens is common, yet little is known about how infection with one pathogen affects the host's immunological response to another. Moreover, no work has been found in the literature that considers the variability of the host immune health or that examines a …
- Contributors
- Edme, Soho, Wirkus, Stephen, Castillo-Chavez, Carlos, et al.
- Created Date
- 2011