Lisa Sattenspiel
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Anthropology researcher
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Lisa Sattenspielanthropology Degrees
Anthropology
#1983
World Rank
#2559
Historical Rank
Cultural Anthropology
#105
World Rank
#134
Historical Rank
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Anthropology
Lisa Sattenspiel's Degrees
- PhD Anthropology University of California, Berkeley
- Masters Anthropology University of California, Berkeley
- Bachelors Anthropology University of California, Berkeley
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Why Is Lisa Sattenspiel Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Lisa Sattenspiel is an anthropologist at the University of Missouri known for her work on infectious diseases, their spread and ecology. She is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Lisa Sattenspiel's Published Works
Published Works
- Modeling and analyzing HIV transmission: the effect of contact patterns (1988) (432)
- Mathematical models to characterize early epidemic growth: A review. (2016) (323)
- A structured epidemic model incorporating geographic mobility among regions. (1995) (316)
- Stable Populations and Skeletal Age (1983) (202)
- The spread and persistence of infectious diseases in structured populations (1988) (145)
- Simulating the effect of quarantine on the spread of the 1918–19 flu in Central Canada (2003) (143)
- Explaining Biased Sex Ratios in Human Populations: A Critique of Recent Studies [and Comments and Reply] (1990) (116)
- Finding optimal vaccination strategies under parameter uncertainty using stochastic programming. (2008) (80)
- Sexual partner selectiveness effects on homosexual HIV transmission dynamics. (1988) (80)
- Population structure and the spread of disease. (1987) (65)
- Structured epidemic models and the spread of influenza in the central Canadian subarctic. (1998) (60)
- The Geographic Spread of Infectious Diseases: Models and Applications (2009) (58)
- Tropical environments, human activities, and the transmission of infectious diseases. (2000) (57)
- Social contexts, syndemics, and infectious disease in northern Aboriginal populations (2007) (54)
- The design and use of an agent‐based model to simulate the 1918 influenza epidemic at Norway House, Manitoba (2009) (44)
- Thinking clearly about social aspects of infectious disease transmission (2021) (44)
- Mortality from contact-related epidemics among indigenous populations in Greater Amazonia (2015) (40)
- Defining epidemics in computer simulation models: How do definitions influence conclusions? (2017) (39)
- Modeling the spread of infectious disease in human populations (1990) (37)
- Environmental context, social interactions, and the spread of HIV (1990) (34)
- The effects of population structure on the spread of the HIV infection. (1990) (29)
- Boats, Trains, and Immunity: The Spread of the Spanish Flu on the Island of Newfoundland (2007) (26)
- Regional patterns of mortality during the 1918 influenza pandemic in Newfoundland. (2011) (26)
- Influenza-Associated Mortality during the 1918–1919 Influenza Pandemic in Alaska and Labrador (2013) (25)
- Epidemics in nonrandomly mixing populations: a simulation. (1987) (25)
- Agent‐based modeling of the spread of the 1918–1919 flu in three Canadian fur trading communities (2010) (23)
- Modeling the influence of settlement structure on the spread of influenza among communities (2000) (22)
- The structure and context of social interactions and the spread of HIV (1989) (14)
- Sex‐ and age‐based differences in mortality during the 1918 influenza pandemic on the island of Newfoundland (2019) (14)
- Geographic spread of measles on the island of Dominica, West Indies. (1993) (13)
- Human Biologists in the Archives: Infectious diseases in the historical archives: a modeling approach (2002) (10)
- Applications of Agent-Based Modelling Techniques to Studies of Historical Epidemics: The 1918 Flu in Newfoundland and Labrador (2015) (10)
- COCIRCULATING EPIDEMICS, CHRONIC HEALTH PROBLEMS, AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY LABRADOR AND ALASKA (2012) (8)
- Gleaning signals about the past from cemetery data. (2009) (8)
- Early sub-exponential epidemic growth: Simple models, nonlinear incidence rates, and additional mechanisms: Reply to comments on "Mathematical models to characterize early epidemic growth: A review". (2016) (8)
- Modeling Archaeology: Origins of the Artificial Anasazi Project and Beyond (2015) (7)
- Spatiotemporal dynamics of measles: Synchrony and persistence in a disease metapopulation (2009) (7)
- The 1918 influenza pandemic did not accelerate tuberculosis mortality decline in early-20th century Newfoundland: Investigating historical and social explanations. (2021) (7)
- Agent‐Based Modeling and the Second Epidemiologic Transition (2014) (6)
- The second epidemiologic transition on the brink: What we can learn from the island of Newfoundland during the early 20th century (2017) (6)
- Ecology of Infectious Diseases in Natural Populations: Spatial Dynamics Group Report (1995) (5)
- The Epidemiology of Human Disease (2012) (4)
- Indigenous peoples and pandemics (2022) (3)
- Finding Optimal Vaccination Strategies under Uncertainty using Stochastic Programming (2008) (3)
- The Geographic Spread of Infectious Diseases (2017) (3)
- The Timing of the Second Epidemiologic Transition in Small US Towns and Cities (2014) (3)
- Using cultural, historical, and epidemiological data to inform, calibrate, and verify model structures in agent-based simulations. (2019) (3)
- Coevolution of Humans and Pathogens (2015) (3)
- “We didn't get much schooling because we were fishing all the time”: Potential impacts of irregular school attendance on the spread of epidemics (2021) (2)
- Yellow fever, black goddess: The coevolution of people and plagues. (1997) (2)
- Explorations in paleodemography: an overview of the Artificial Long House Valley agent‐based modeling project (2016) (2)
- Investigating COVID-19 transmission and mortality differences between indigenous and non-indigenous populations in Mexico (2022) (2)
- Emerging Themes in Anthropology and Epidemiology: Geographic Spread, Evolving Pathogens, and Syndemics (2010) (2)
- Spatial heterogeneity and the spread of infectious diseases (1996) (2)
- Aids and accusation: Haiti and the geography of blame. By Paul Farmer. Berkeley: University of California Press. 1992. 352 pp. ISBN 0-520-07701-6. $35 (cloth) (1993) (1)
- Book review: Disease maps: Epidemics on the ground (2012) (1)
- Spread and maintenance of a disease in a structured population. (1988) (1)
- Silent travelers: Germs, genes, and the “immigrant menace.” By Alan M. Kraut. New York: Basic Books. 1994. 369 pp. ISBN 0-465-07823-0. $25 (cloth) (1995) (1)
- Biological invasions: Theory and practice (1998) (1)
- MODELING THE GEOGRAPHIC SPREAD OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES USING POPULATION- AND INDIVIDUAL-BASED APPROACHES (2007) (1)
- Exploring the effects of constant versus age-specific fertility rates on prehistoric population estimates (2015) (0)
- Chapter Two. The Art of Epidemic Modeling: Concepts and Basic Structures (2009) (0)
- Let them eat corn: Cause-specific mortality and prehistoric population dynamics in transitional environments (2017) (0)
- Chapter Three. Modeling the Geographic Spread of In uenza Epidemics (2009) (0)
- Co-circulating epidemics and health care access in early 20th century Alaska and Labrador: implications for emerging diseases of the present (2018) (0)
- A Family of Five is Not the Same as One Household: The Effects of Disaggregation on Demographic Outcomes in Archaeological Simulation Models (2016) (0)
- Mosquito: A Natural History of Our Most Persistent and Deadly Foe.ByAndrew Spielmanand, Michael D’Antonio.New York: Hyperion. $22.95. xix + 247 p + 8 pl; ill.; index. ISBN: 0–7868–6781–7. 2001. (2002) (0)
- Age-specific mortality and the role of living remotely: The 1918-20 influenza pandemic in Kautokeino and Karasjok, Norway (2023) (0)
- Chapter Four. Modeling Geographic Spread I: Population-based Approaches (2009) (0)
- The spread of disease in subdivided population (1984) (0)
- Chapter Eight. Maps, Projections, and GIS: Geographers' Approaches (2009) (0)
- Chapter Nine. Revisiting SARS and Looking to the Future (2009) (0)
- Impact of prior/concurrent exposure to infectious diseases on variability in the 1918-19 flu epidemic on Newfoundland [abstract] (2008) (0)
- The Cambridge world history of human disease. Edited by Kenneth F. Kiple. New York: Cambridge University Press. 1993. ISBN 0-521-33286-9. 1176 pp. $175 (cloth) (1994) (0)
- Chapter Seven. Spatial Models and the Control of Foot-and-Mouth Disease (2009) (0)
- Epidemic Models With and Without Mortality: When Does It Matter? (2016) (0)
- Modeling Environmental and Demographic Effects on Population Size in the Southwest United States (2015) (0)
- Anthropology of Infectious Disease, Merrill Singer. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA (2015), 320 pp. (2016) (0)
- The impact of illness behavior of patients and caregivers on the spread of an influenza epidemic (2016) (0)
- Evolution. Essays in honour of John Maynard Smith. Edited by P.J. Greenwood, P.H. Harvey, and M. Slatkin. New York: Cambridge University Press. 1987. viii + 328 pp., tables, figures, index. $24.95 (paper) (1988) (0)
- Epidemiology and Epidemic Modeling (2019) (0)
- Chapter Six. Modeling Geographic Spread II: Individual-based Approaches (2009) (0)
- Chapter Five. Spatial Heterogeneity and Endemicity: The Case of Measles (2009) (0)
- The evolution, transmission and geographic spread of infectious diseases in human populations: Questions and models (2004) (0)
- : Medical Anthropology in Ecological Perspective . Ann McElroy, Patricia K. Townsend. (1986) (0)
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