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Dr Jay Newby
PhD
- Postdoctoral research assistant
eMail:
newby [-at-] maths [dot] ox [dot] ac [dot] uk Contact Form
CV:
cv.pdf
Phone Number(s):
Reception/Secretary: +44 1865 273525
Direct: +44 1865 615136
Office:
RI.2.24
Departmental Address:
Mathematical Institute
24-29 St Giles'
Oxford
OX1 3LB
England
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Research Interests:
I'm interested in Stochastic Processes and their application to biological problems. My current projects include intracellular transport in neurons and metastable behavior in discrete jump processes.
Major/Recent Publications:
- J. Newby. Isolating intrinsic noise sources in a stochastic genetic switch. Physical Biol., 9:026002, 2012 abstract
- P. C. Bressloff and J. Newby. Filling of a Poisson trap by a population of random intermittent searchers. Phys. Rev. E, 85:031909, 2012 abstract
- L. Y. Ming, J. Newby, and P. C. Bressloff. Effects of Demographic Noise on the Synchronization of a Metapopulation in a Fluctuating Environment. Phys. Rev. Lett. 107:118102, 2011 abstract
- J. P. Keener and J. Newby. A perturbation analysis of spontaneous action potential initiation by stochastic ion channels. Phys. Rev. E, , 84:011918, 2011 abstract
- P.C. Bressloff and J. Newby. Quasi-steady state analysis of two-dimensional random intermittent search processes. Phys. Rev. E, 83:061139, 2011. abstract
- J. Newby and J. P. Keener. An asymptotic analysis of the spatially-inhomogeneous velocity-jump process. Multiscale Modeling & Simulation, 9:735-765, 2011. abstract
- J. Newby and P. C. Bressloff. Local synaptic signaling enhances the stochastic transport of motor-driven cargo in neurons. Physical Biol., 7:036004, 2010. abstract
- J. Newby and P. C. Bressloff. Random intermittent search and the Tug-of-war model of motor-driven transport. J. Stat. Mech., 4:P04014, 2010. abstract
- J. M. Newby and P. C. Bressloff. Quasi-steady state reduction of molecular motor-based models of directed intermittent search. Bull. Math. Biol., 72:1840-1866, 2010.
abstract
- J. Newby and P. C. Bressloff. Directed intermittent search for a hidden target on a dendritic tree. Phys. Rev. E, 80(2):021913, 2009. abstract
- P. C. Bressloff and J. Newby. Directed intermittent search for hidden targets. New J. Phys., 11:023033, 2009. abstract
PhD Thesis: Molecular motor-based models of random intermittent search in dendrites (reprint)
Teaching:
c6.3a Perturbation Methods (Michaelmas term 2010)
c8.1b Mathematical Physiology (Hilary term 2011)
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