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THE
FIELDS INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
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May
2 ,
2014
Guelph Biomathematics and Biostatistics Symposium
The Mathematics and Statistics of Food
Safety
Arboretum
Auditorium
Organizers
Allan
Willms ,
University of Guelph(Co-Chair, Mathematics)
Julie Horrocks, University of Guelph (Co-Chair, Statistics)
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Overview
The 9th annual Guelph Biomathematics and Biostatistics Symposium
will be held on May 2, 2014 in the Arboretum Auditorium, set in
the heart of the Arboretum at the University of Guelph. The principal
objective of the symposium is to facilitate collaborations between
mathematicians, statisticians and bioscience researchers. This year's
theme is on the mathematics and statistics of food safety. The symposium
consists of two keynote lectures (including the Gordon C. Ashton
Memorial Biometrics Lecture), and several invited talks. There will
also be a poster session for graduate and undergraduate students,
with a prize awarded for the best poster. This year's symposium
is intended to provide exposure to various mathematical and statistical
techniques used in the field of food safety.
Food safety is an area of enormous concern, both in the developed
and the developing world. According to the World Health Organization,
there are over 75 million cases of foodborne illness per year in
the U.S. alone, and 5000 deaths. In Canada, every year more than
4 million Canadians get food poisoning. Foodborne illness is usually
the result of eating food that has been contaminated by pathogens
such as bacteria, viruses or parasites. Characteristics of foodstuffs,
such as acidity, moisture content and cooking temperature can be
controlled to regulate the growth of pathogens. The manner in which
food is grown, processed, packaged and stored can likewise be regulated.
The fields of mathematics and statistics play an essential role
in the regulation of food safety. Statistics comes into play
in risk assessments, the estimation of the burden of foodborne illness
and surveillance foroutbreaks of food poisoning. Mathematics is
used to model the biology of contamination and the growth of bacteria.
The focus of the proposed symposium will be on the role of mathematics
and statistics in food safety. The symposium will provide an opportunity
for food safety scientists and regulators to interface with mathematicians
and statisticians, to share different approaches to the problems
of food safety and to identify open problems.
The maximum size for the posters will be 46 inches high and 56 inches
across
Keynote speakers
Aamir Fazil
Chief, Risk Integration Synthesis & Knowledge Section, Public
Health Risk Sciences Division, Public Health Agency of Canada,
Guelph, ON
Jianhong Wu
Canada Research Chair in Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and
Director, MITACS Center for Disease Modeling, Department of Mathematics
& Statistics, York University
Draft Program
Session 1:
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Gordon C. Ashton Memorial Lecture (First keynote speaker) |
9:00-10:00 |
Aamir Fazil, Chief, Risk Integration Synthesis &
Knowledge Section,
Public Health Risk Sciences Division, Public Health Agency of
Canada
Systems modelling for food safety decision making (slides) |
10:00-10:30 |
Coffee |
Session
2:
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Invited Speakers |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Keith Warriner, Professor, Department of Food Science,
University of Guelph
Risk Analysis in Food Safety: Swapping the Petri Dish for
a Calculator |
11:00 - 11:30 |
Kate Thomas, Epidemiologist, Public Health Agency of
Canada, Guelph ON
Estimating Number of Cases of Foodborne Illness in Canada (slides) |
11:30 - 1:00 |
Lunch |
Session 3:
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Second keynote speaker |
1:00 - 2:00 |
Jianhong Wu, CRC Chair in Industrial and Applied Mathematics,
York University
Templates of mathematical models describing cross-contamination
mechanisms and control in fresh-food processing |
2:00 - 2:15 |
Refreshments/Student Poster Session |
Session 4:
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Invited Speakers |
2:15 - 2:45 |
Amy Greer, CRC Chair Population Disease Modelling,
University of Guelph
A primer for thinking about the introduction and spread of infectious
diseases along the farm-to-fork continuum (slides) |
2:45 - 3:15 |
Mike Williams, Senior Risk Analyst, Office of Public
Health Science,
Food Safety and Inspection Service, Fort Collins, CO
Simplified modeling framework for microbial food-safety risk assessments
(slides) |
3:15 - 3:30 |
Student Awards |
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