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Dr. Barbara A. Han

Disease Ecologist | PhD, Oregon State University

Expertise
machine learning, behavioral ecology, macroecology

www.hanlab.science

845 677-7600 x135

Barbara Han’s research is at the intersection of ecology, computing, and global health. Han uses machine learning to forecast outbreaks of new zoonotic diseases – those that ‘jump’ from animals to humans. Of more than a billion cases of human illness reported each year, the majority are attributed to zoonotic pathogens.

Han employs complex computer algorithms to analyze patterns and processes in nature that could result in the next Ebola, SARS, or West Nile virus outbreak. Some of these models compare traits of known animal disease carriers – size, diet, reproductive habits, biogeography – with thousands of species not yet known to carry disease, in order to predict which animals might become disease carriers in the future. Han also works on projects that predict where and when diseases could emerge; other research investigates why and how some species transmit more zoonoses to humans than others.

Research like Han’s has the potential to become a valuable tool for public health officials. Predicting and preempting the arrival of a new zoonotic disease will save lives. This technology could also impact land management decisions, as it becomes obvious that diseases are more likely to emerge from certain habitats.

Han has partnered with diverse collaborators at IBM and NASA to advance research on global disease prediction. She contributes to efforts led by WHO and the US Government to apply this research to disease preemption.

Bancroft, B. A., Barbara A. Han, C. L. Searle, L. M. Biga, D. H. Olson, Lee B. Kats, Josh J. Lawler, and Andrew R. Blaustein. 2011. “Species-Level Correlates of Susceptibility to the Pathogenic Amphibian Fungus Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis in the United States”. Biodiversity and Conservation 20 (9): 1911-20. doi:10.1007/s10531-011-0066-4.
Blaustein, Andrew R., Barbara A. Han, R. A. Relyea, Pieter T. J. Johnson, J. C. Buck, S. S. Gervasi, and Lee B. Kats. 2011. “The Complexity of Amphibian Population Declines: Understanding the Role of Cofactors in Driving Amphibian Losses”. In Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology, 1223:108-19. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05909.x.
Altizer, Sonia, R. Bartel, and Barbara A. Han. 2011. “Animal Migration and Infectious Disease Risk”. Science 331 (6015): 296-302. doi:10.1126/science.1194694.
Searle, C. L., Lisa K. Belden, B. A. Bancroft, Barbara A. Han, L. M. Biga, and Andrew R. Blaustein. 2010. “Experimental Examination of the Effects of Ultraviolet-B Radiation in Combination With Other Stressors on Frog Larvae”. Oecologia 162 (1): 237-45. doi:10.1007/s00442-009-1440-8.
Han, Barbara A., P. W. Bradley, and Andrew R. Blaustein. 2008. “Ancient Behaviors of Larval Amphibians in Response to an Emerging Fungal Pathogen, Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis”. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 63 (2): 241-50. doi:10.1007/s00265-008-0655-8.
Lampo, Margarita, D. Sánchez, A. Nicolás, M. Márquez, F. Nava-González, C. Z. Garcia, M. Rinaldi, et al. 2008. “Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis in Venezuela”. Herpetological Review 39: 449-54.
Sánchez, D., A. Chacon-Ortiz, F. Leon, Barbara A. Han, and Margarita Lampo. 2008. “Widespread Occurrence of an Emerging Pathogen in Amphibian Communities of the Venezuelan Andes”. Biological Conservation 141 (11): 2898-2905. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2008.08.009.
Han, Barbara A., Lee B. Kats, Rachel C. Pommerening, Ryan P. Ferrer, Marcia Murry-Ewers, and Andrew R. Blaustein. 2007. “Behavioral Avoidance of Ultraviolet-B Radiation by Two Species of Neotropical Poison-Dart Frogs”. Biotropica 39 (3): 433-35. doi:10.1111/btp.2007.39.issue-310.1111/j.1744-7429.2007.00268.x.
Lampo, Margarita, Cesar Barrio-Amorós, and Barbara A. Han. 2007. “Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis Infection in the Recently Rediscovered Atelopus Mucubajiensis (Anura, Bufonidae), a Critically Endangered Frog from the Venezuelan Andes”. EcoHealth 3 (4): 299-302. doi:10.1007/s10393-006-0068-y.
Johnson, Pieter T. J., Eric R. Preu, Daniel R. Sutherland, John M. Romansic, Barbara A. Han, and Andrew R. Blaustein. 2006. “Adding Infection to Injury: Synergistic Effects of Predation and Parasitism on Amphibian Malformations”. Ecology 87 (9): 2227-35. doi:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[2227:AITISE]2.0.CO;2.
adrian castellanos

Dr. Adrian Castellanos is the data manager and spatial analyst in the Han lab, where he supports data visualization and scripting. He received his PhD in Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences from Texas A&M University working with Dr. Jessica Light. This work focused on how natural history collections can be used to examine patterns of biodiversity and biogeography in Central American mammals, highlighting the continued importance of specimen collection and data digitization. Although he identifies as a mammalogist, Adrian has also worked on birds, amphibians, orthopterans, and ticks with projects involving disease ecology, behavioral plasticity, morphological shape change, cryptic diversity, and species distribution and occupancy modeling. His research interests include improving species distribution modeling for conservation and biodiversity work, biodiversity informatics, and helping write and troubleshoot code.