Publications by Statistical Genetics and Epidemiology Our research spans areas of statistical genetics, in particular the development of powerful statistical approaches to analyse genetic data, as well as studying infectious diseases. Lehmann, B. et al. (2025) “Methodological opportunities in genomic data analysis to advance health equity”, Nature Reviews Genetics, pp. 1–15. Stopard, I. et al. (2025) “Modelling the effects of diurnal temperature variation on malaria infection dynamics in mosquitoes”, Communications Biology, 8(1). Freni-Sterrantino, A. et al. (2025) “Assessments and developments in constructing a National Health Index for policy-making, in the UK”, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A: Statistics in Society, 188(2), pp. 491–514. Ogi-Gittins, I. et al. (2025) “Real-time inference of the end of an outbreak: Temporally aggregated disease incidence data and under-reporting”, Infectious Disease Modelling [Preprint]. Cussons, D. et al. (2025) “The effect of nitrile gloves on temperature perception during hot water immersion.”, Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries, 51(3), p. 107392. Chen, S. et al. (2025) “Mass testing for discovery and control of COVID-19 outbreaks in adult social care: an observational study and cost-effectiveness analysis of 14 805 care homes in England”, BMJ Public Health, 3(1). Steyn, N. et al. (2025) “A primer on inference and prediction with epidemic renewal models and sequential Monte Carlo”, arXiv. Bajaj, S., Thompson, R. and Lambert, B. (2025) “A renewal-equation approach to estimating R t and infectious disease case counts in the presence of reporting delays”, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 383(2292). Steyn, N. et al. (2025) “Pandemic-risk-related behaviour change in England from June 2020 to March 2022: REACT-1 study among over 2 million people”, medRxiv. Awuah, A.-A. et al. (2025) “Seroprevalence of dengue in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana and Senegal: results of the SERODEN study”, International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 152, p. 107428. Previous page ‹‹ Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Current page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 … Next page ››