As we march towards the end of 2025, we reflect on the amazing mathematical journeys that our contributors have transported us to! In total, we published 11 stories and 4 blogs this year. Our contributors' mathematical backgrounds range from #PureMathematics to #AppliedSciences including #MathematicalBiology. These stories and blogs by amazing women also encompass their wide-ranging mathematical careers from penning #MathematicalPoetries to working in #QuantumScience. Please give these inspiring articles a read! We’ll be back on the 7th of January 2026! We wish you Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year!

🖥️ Story by Anna Ma: https://hermathsstory.eu/anna-ma/
🗄️ Story by Catherine Micek: https://hermathsstory.eu/catherine-micek/
🩺 Story by Bindi Brook: https://hermathsstory.eu/bindi-brook/
📝 Story by JoAnne Growney: https://hermathsstory.eu/joanne-growney/
🗺️ Story by Kateryna Marynets: https://hermathsstory.eu/kateryna-marynets/
📈 Story by Alexandra Edletzberger: https://hermathsstory.eu/alexandra-edletzberger/
⚛️ Story by Laura Lewis: https://hermathsstory.eu/laura-lewis/
🌗 Story by Mihyun Kang: https://hermathsstory.eu/mihyun-kang/
🎻 Story by Anna Breger: https://hermathsstory.eu/anna-breger/
🛣️ Story by Ilse Fisher: https://hermathsstory.eu/ilse-fischer/
🔐 Story by Surya Mathialagan: https://hermathsstory.eu/surya-mathialagan/

📜 Blog by Jessy Randall on “Poetry as Lens: Two Historical Women Mathematicians”: https://hermathsstory.eu/poetry-as-lens-two-historical-women-mathematicians/
🤝 Blog by Jamie Haddock & Anna Little on “Association for Women in Mathematics at the SIAM/CAIMS 2025 Annual Meeting”: https://hermathsstory.eu/association-for-women-in-mathematics-at-the-siam-caims-2025-annual-meeting/
🧭 Blog by Rosie Evans & Ashleigh Ratcliffe on “The Piscopia Initiative & How to Train Your Allies present: What Can You Do?”: https://hermathsstory.eu/the-piscopia-initiative-how-to-train-your-allies-present-what-can-you-do/
🎥 Blog by us on “Reflecting on ‘Counted Out’: A Conversation About Maths, Power, and Inclusion”: https://hermathsstory.eu/reflecting-on-counted-out-a-conversation-about-maths-power-and-inclusion/

Photo by Giulia Bertelli on Unsplash

@Daniel_Hoffmann

And another book targeting undergraduates:

"Mathematics in biology", by Meister, Lee and Portugues.
http://www.mathinbio.com/

"Compact and elegant. Particularly welcome are straightforward discussions of filtering and other signal processing, optimal estimation, and fold change detection, all of which are hard to find in an accessible presentation at this level."

#MathematicalBiology

Mathematics in Biology

@Daniel_Hoffmann

There's also lots of straightforward, entry-level math and statistics in D'Arcy Thompson's "On growth and form", a most enjoyable book for the mathematically inclined. I suggest the 1942 edition.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Growth_and_Form

#MathematicalBiology

On Growth and Form - Wikipedia

@Daniel_Hoffmann

"Mathematical biology" by David Tong may do:
http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/tong/mathbio.html

Tong's page offers problem sheets, and also points to further mathematical biology resources online.

#MathematicalBiology

“My PhD was all about understanding what happens to blood flow in collapsible blood vessels like the giraffe jugular vein. In my postdoc I was investigating how to optimise ventilator settings for patients in ICU and then how to deliver inhaled therapies into the lungs. Since then, my focus has been in trying to understand how diseases like Asthma and other respiratory diseases originate and then progress. This involves incorporating biology and physics into mathematical and computational models, using approaches from different areas of applied maths. More recently I have started to look into the mechanisms that could lead to a rare lung disease called lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) and Long Covid.” - Bindi Brook

➡️ https://hermathsstory.eu/bindi-brook/

#Academia #PhD #Professor #AppliedMathematics #MathematicalBiology #MathematicalMedicine #UnconsciousBias #WomenInMaths #WomenInSTEM #HerMathsStory

Bindi Brook

Born in Nairobi, Kenya • Studied Mathematics at the University of Leeds • Highest Degree PhD in Applied Mathematics from the University of Leeds • Lives in the UK • Occupation Professor of Mathematical Medicine and Biology at the University of Nottingham When I think back to school days, my sense is that I’ve always enjoyed mathematics. But there is one particular memory that is contrary to that. I was around 10 years old and had been finding most of the “maths” we did quite easy. Then some combination of factors (teacher, specific content) brought a sudden loss of confidence. I could not get my head around what we were being taught and I thought that was it – that I did not like maths anymore. My dad decided I was being silly (thankfully) and worked through some examples with me, every night, for about a week. By the end of it, my temporary lack of confidence had gone and ever since then I have really enjoyed some form of maths (here one can read – NOT pure maths). In fact, whenever I couldn’t make a decision about what I wanted to do next (at the end of A-levels, at the end of my undergraduate degree) I just picked the thing I enjoyed the most (maths and then applied maths) and went with it. I come from a South Asian culture where, if you’re considered “able”, you’re expected to study Medicine. That wasn’t for me – I really did not like remembering lots of facts and much preferred the problem-solving needed for studying maths. (...) I have started to look into the mechanisms that could lead to a rare lung disease called lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) and Long Covid. In an interesting twist though, in my research career, I have essentially specialised in applying mathematics to biological and medical problems! My PhD was all about understanding what happens to blood flow in collapsible blood vessels like the giraffe jugular vein. In my postdoc I was investigating how to optimise ventilator settings for patients in ICU and then how to deliver inhaled therapies into the lungs. Since then, my focus has been in trying to understand how diseases like Asthma and other respiratory diseases originate and then progress. This involves incorporating biology and physics into mathematical and computational models, using approaches from different areas of applied maths. More recently I have started to look into the mechanisms that could lead to a rare lung disease called lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) and Long Covid. Although I am now a Professor and have spent much of my working life in academia, I took a somewhat torturous path getting there and could have picked a different route a number of times. Immediately after my PhD I worked for a credit card company, applying statistical models in a somewhat robotic fashion. There was no problem-solving involved and within 3 months I knew I could not stay and 3 months later started a postdoc in Sheffield. Towards the end of my postdoc I had my first daughter and worked part-time to complete it after which I decided I would just take time out to look after her. Two years later I had my second daughter. Throughout my career, I have had some fantastic mentors (both women and men) who guided me through some tough times. These included workplace bullying and discrimination (as a woman of colour) and I have had to work hard to overcome these hurdles. When my second daughter was around 2 years old I was starting to consider alternative careers to academia (I felt I had been out of it too long, hadn’t written up my postdoc work into peer-reviewed papers, etc) when I got a phone call from a previous academic colleague from the University of Nottingham asking if I would be interested in covering his teaching part-time, as he was taking a sabbatical. I took up this offer and continued to teach and work part-time until I felt my daughters were old enough for me to consider getting back into research. I applied for and was awarded a fantastic “return-to-research” Daphne Jackson Fellowship which allowed me to restart my research on a part-time basis and also write up some of my postdoc work. I will be eternally grateful for this opportunity, as it allowed me to start my research in asthma, build up a network of collaborators and eventually my first MRC grant. The other most important thing that made all this possible is my amazing, hugely supportive, parents who helped look after my daughters for many years. Throughout my career, I have had some fantastic mentors (both women and men) who guided me through some tough times. These included workplace bullying and discrimination (as a woman of colour) and I have had to work hard to overcome these hurdles. Unfortunately, these things still exist. More recently (in my case) these have been more in the form of unconscious bias rather than overt. And significant efforts are being made to address these issues in my School. I try to contribute the best I can with these efforts. Nonetheless, it does mean that I regularly have to sit back and ask if it’s worth it. The answer isn’t an easy “yes”, not just for the above reasons but also because of the way higher education is going these days in terms of massive budget cuts and increased bureaucracy. On the positive side, I work with wonderful friends and colleagues, on worthwhile research problems, and great students.

@HildegardUecker and I are excited to be running the second edition of our #EvolutionaryRescue workshop series at the #MaxPlanck Plön, June 30-July 3. This time the focus is on bridging theory and experiments.

Invited speakers: Helen Alexander, Lutz Becks, Robert D Holt, Laure Olazcuaga, Jitka Polechova.

Submit an abstract by March 15 and tell your friends.

More info: https://workshops.evolbio.mpg.de/event/128/

#Evolution #ecoevo #evol_gen #MathematicalModeling #MathematicalBiology

Evolutionary Rescue - bridging the gap between theory and experiments

IMPORTANT DATES Workshop: 30 June – 3 July, 2025 The workshop starts on June 30 at 5pm and ends on July 3 in the evening. Pre-school: June 29 (afternoon) & June 30, 2025 Registration deadline: 15 March, 2025 Notification of acceptance: 22 March, 2025 OVERVIEW Evolutionary rescue is a topic of great interest, from medicine to agriculture to conservation, and from natural observations to experiments to theory. In 2023, we organised a workshop on ‘Mathematical models of evolutionary rescue’. In...

Workshops MPI for Evolutionary Biology (Indico)
About – MAUD MENTEN INSTITUTE

👀 New study reveals the explosive secret of the squirting cucumber

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2410420121
https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2024-11-26-new-study-reveals-explosive-secret-squirting-cucumber

Seed ejection filmed at 8600 frames per second with a high-speed camera, that remained aimed at the fruit for several days, using an image-based auto-trigger set up.

#Biology #Science #Biomechanics #Locomotion #PlantScience #PlantAnatomy #Seeds #Plants #MathematicalBiology #Cucumber #video #highspeedvideo #STEM

How Is Science Even Possible? | Quanta Magazine

How are scientists able to crack fundamental questions about nature and life? How does math make the complex cosmos understandable? In this episode, the physicist Nigel Goldenfeld and co-host Steven Strogatz explore the deep foundations of the scientific process.

Quanta Magazine

I love talking to nerds about their passion projects, so this series as been a lot of fun to put together. Thank you to Heiko Enderling for thinking of me to produce SMB's Biology in Numbers, and to Jane Heffernan for keeping me on to create season 2!
If you haven't already listened, you can find it on all major podcast platforms.

In the meanwhile, here's a quick video of what we talked about in season 1

#SMB #MathBio #podcast #scicomm #MathematicalBiology