Ruth Baker
Professor of Applied Mathematics
Research interests
My research focuses on developing and applying novel mathematical, computational and statistical methodologies and modelling frameworks for investigating developmental biology systems at the cell and tissue level. I develop biologically realistic models that, used in tandem with experimental investigations, can provide fundamental insights into key biological mechanisms. An important aspect of my work is therefore multidisciplinary collaboration with theoreticians, life scientists and clinicians both within Oxford and further afield.
I also play a key role in QBIOX (https://www.qbiox.co.uk/), an MPLS-funded initiative to develop quantitative biology in Oxford.
Prizes, awards, and scholarships:
- Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award 2017-2022
- Leverhulme Research Fellowship 2017-2019
- London Mathematical Society Whitehead Prize 2014
Recent publications
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COLEC12 and TRAIL signaling confine cranial neural crest cell trajectories and promote collective cell migration.
Journal article
McLennan R. et al, (2022), Developmental Dynamics
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On the correspondence between symmetries of two-dimensional autonomous
dynamical systems and their phase plane realisations
Preprint
Ohlsson F. et al, (2022)
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A local continuum model of cell-cell adhesion
Journal article
Falco C. et al, (2022), SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics
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A local continuum model of cell-cell adhesion
Journal article
Falcó C. et al, (2022), SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics
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Multifidelity multilevel Monte Carlo to accelerate approximate Bayesian parameter inference for partially observed stochastic processes
Journal article
Warne DJ. et al, (2022), Journal of Computational Physics, 469