RAPID: An in vivo driven SEIRS (susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered susceptible) mode — NSF Award to Yale University (CT, $20
The goal of this proposal is to increase the understanding of SARS-CoV-2 transmission amongst naïve, recovering or vaccinated individuals. The current COVID pandemic is a stark illustration of the global interdependence between people and other animals. Resumption of normal societal function in the current COVID crisis
| Award title | RAPID: An in vivo driven SEIRS (susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered susceptible) mode |
|---|---|
| Award ID | 2031960 |
| Awardee | Yale University |
| City | NEW HAVEN |
| State | CT |
| Amount obligated | $200,000 |
| Principal investigator | Caroline Zeiss |
| Program | COVID-19 Research |
| Start date | 06/15/2020 |
| Abstract | The goal of this proposal is to increase the understanding of SARS-CoV-2 transmission amongst naïve, recovering or vaccinated individuals. The current COVID pandemic is a stark illustration of the global interdependence between people and other animals. Resumption of normal societal function in the current COVID crisis will require immunity to SARS-CoV-2 either through natural means or through vaccination on a global scale. The rate at which unexposed people (currently most of the human populati |
| Source | NSF Awards |
$799/mo
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