Joseph Lemaitre
@josephlemaitre.bsky.social
👀 Developing novel infectious disease dynamics modeling approaches to inform public health policies
📍Assistant Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill (🇺🇸), PhD from EPFL (🇨🇭).
🌍 josephlemaitre.com
📍Assistant Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill (🇺🇸), PhD from EPFL (🇨🇭).
🌍 josephlemaitre.com
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
#epinowcast 0.4.0 is out! This release has been a long time coming and contains work from many contributors. It includdes new features, better better and clearer documentation.
package.epinowcast.org/news/index.h...
package.epinowcast.org/news/index.h...
Changelog
package.epinowcast.org
October 17, 2025 at 3:10 PM
#epinowcast 0.4.0 is out! This release has been a long time coming and contains work from many contributors. It includdes new features, better better and clearer documentation.
package.epinowcast.org/news/index.h...
package.epinowcast.org/news/index.h...
just learnt that vs code recently added native git blame decorations with setting:
"git.blame.editorDecoration.enabled": true
good bye complex extensions, goodbye gitlens 👋
"git.blame.editorDecoration.enabled": true
good bye complex extensions, goodbye gitlens 👋
August 12, 2025 at 10:00 AM
just learnt that vs code recently added native git blame decorations with setting:
"git.blame.editorDecoration.enabled": true
good bye complex extensions, goodbye gitlens 👋
"git.blame.editorDecoration.enabled": true
good bye complex extensions, goodbye gitlens 👋
I've been sneaking on that course (by Sam Abbott, Thomas Robacker, Nick Reich) for the past few days on github (did not see the deployed version) and it is really good learning material for learning epi forecasting: nfidd.github.io/sismid/
July 15, 2025 at 2:13 PM
I've been sneaking on that course (by Sam Abbott, Thomas Robacker, Nick Reich) for the past few days on github (did not see the deployed version) and it is really good learning material for learning epi forecasting: nfidd.github.io/sismid/
James does really great science ! This is a great job
We're hiring a modelling postdoc at PSI Oxford for two exciting projects: 1) modelling the early immune responses to Nipah vaccination, and 2) joining the PRESTO team working on immunobridging in vaccine evaluation studies.
tinyurl.com/5abbxrjh
Get in touch for more info! Deadline 4th August.
tinyurl.com/5abbxrjh
Get in touch for more info! Deadline 4th August.
Job Details
tinyurl.com
July 11, 2025 at 5:26 PM
James does really great science ! This is a great job
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Wow. This is an amazing project with a huge amount of work behind it. Even if you aren't into drosophila, it's worth a look
The "reproducibility crisis" in science constantly makes headlines. Repro efforts are often limited. What if you could assess reproducibility of an entire field?
That's what @brunolemaitre.bsky.social et al. have done. Fly immunity is highly replicable & offers lessons for #metascience
A 🧵 1/n
That's what @brunolemaitre.bsky.social et al. have done. Fly immunity is highly replicable & offers lessons for #metascience
A 🧵 1/n
July 10, 2025 at 10:12 AM
Wow. This is an amazing project with a huge amount of work behind it. Even if you aren't into drosophila, it's worth a look
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
But in fact, fly immunity is highly reproducible! 🎊
~80% of claims could be verified. Moreover, some challenged claims just reflect the field advancing its knowledge/tools.
The lesson: if the tools are good and the research largely exempt from direct translation pressures, science works.
3.5/n
~80% of claims could be verified. Moreover, some challenged claims just reflect the field advancing its knowledge/tools.
The lesson: if the tools are good and the research largely exempt from direct translation pressures, science works.
3.5/n
July 10, 2025 at 8:23 AM
But in fact, fly immunity is highly reproducible! 🎊
~80% of claims could be verified. Moreover, some challenged claims just reflect the field advancing its knowledge/tools.
The lesson: if the tools are good and the research largely exempt from direct translation pressures, science works.
3.5/n
~80% of claims could be verified. Moreover, some challenged claims just reflect the field advancing its knowledge/tools.
The lesson: if the tools are good and the research largely exempt from direct translation pressures, science works.
3.5/n
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
When everything is considered together (w/ caveats), the most prestigious institutes are the most likely to produce irreproducible work. Journal tier was a more minor effect, and in fact, "high-impact" but not "trophy" journals publish the most reproducible science.
But, many caveats (cont.)
4.3/n
But, many caveats (cont.)
4.3/n
July 10, 2025 at 8:23 AM
When everything is considered together (w/ caveats), the most prestigious institutes are the most likely to produce irreproducible work. Journal tier was a more minor effect, and in fact, "high-impact" but not "trophy" journals publish the most reproducible science.
But, many caveats (cont.)
4.3/n
But, many caveats (cont.)
4.3/n
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
more than that but right order of magnitude. I always say $10^1 for preprint; $10^3 for journal article; $10^5 for research. most costs are staff not tech because of responsible screening, customer service, etc.
July 2, 2025 at 6:20 PM
more than that but right order of magnitude. I always say $10^1 for preprint; $10^3 for journal article; $10^5 for research. most costs are staff not tech because of responsible screening, customer service, etc.
This opinion (LLMs have no world model) is repeated at every AI track in IDD conferences, and while it's true for a narrow definition of world model, I am sure it does not square with audience experience.
Contrary to what Gary says, LLMs play good (1'800 ELO) chess: dynomight.net/more-chess/.
Contrary to what Gary says, LLMs play good (1'800 ELO) chess: dynomight.net/more-chess/.
"It is not just that LLM’s fail to induce proper world models of chess. It’s that they never induce proper worlds of anything. Everything that they do is through mimicry, rather than abstracted cognition across proper world models."
garymarcus.substack.com/p/generative...
garymarcus.substack.com/p/generative...
Generative AI’s crippling and widespread failure to induce robust models of the world
LLM failures to reason, as documented in Apple’s Illusion of Thinking paper, are really only part of a much deeper problem
garymarcus.substack.com
June 30, 2025 at 11:12 AM
This opinion (LLMs have no world model) is repeated at every AI track in IDD conferences, and while it's true for a narrow definition of world model, I am sure it does not square with audience experience.
Contrary to what Gary says, LLMs play good (1'800 ELO) chess: dynomight.net/more-chess/.
Contrary to what Gary says, LLMs play good (1'800 ELO) chess: dynomight.net/more-chess/.
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Not sure how I missed this, but Dijkstra's algorithm has been beaten on sparse graphs 😮
arxiv.org/abs/2504.17033
(Unsurprisingly, this got a STOC'25 best paper award.)
arxiv.org/abs/2504.17033
(Unsurprisingly, this got a STOC'25 best paper award.)
Breaking the Sorting Barrier for Directed Single-Source Shortest Paths
We give a deterministic $O(m\log^{2/3}n)$-time algorithm for single-source shortest paths (SSSP) on directed graphs with real non-negative edge weights in the comparison-addition model. This is the fi...
arxiv.org
May 30, 2025 at 7:20 PM
Not sure how I missed this, but Dijkstra's algorithm has been beaten on sparse graphs 😮
arxiv.org/abs/2504.17033
(Unsurprisingly, this got a STOC'25 best paper award.)
arxiv.org/abs/2504.17033
(Unsurprisingly, this got a STOC'25 best paper award.)
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Which academic communities have a good record of sharing domain-specific open source tools?
Bioinformatics and geospatial analysis comes to mind.
I am trying to think about if they are examples to follow or if there is some difference in the domain (to Infectious disease modelling).
Bioinformatics and geospatial analysis comes to mind.
I am trying to think about if they are examples to follow or if there is some difference in the domain (to Infectious disease modelling).
May 7, 2025 at 9:10 AM
Which academic communities have a good record of sharing domain-specific open source tools?
Bioinformatics and geospatial analysis comes to mind.
I am trying to think about if they are examples to follow or if there is some difference in the domain (to Infectious disease modelling).
Bioinformatics and geospatial analysis comes to mind.
I am trying to think about if they are examples to follow or if there is some difference in the domain (to Infectious disease modelling).
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Earlier this month I gave a workshop on Bayesian methods in epidemiology. With my hosts I developed a pretty elaborate, demonstrative analysis for the workshop which I am happy to share publicly here.
HTML: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
PDF: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
HTML: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
PDF: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
Bayes-by Shower
betanalpha.github.io
May 28, 2025 at 1:47 PM
Earlier this month I gave a workshop on Bayesian methods in epidemiology. With my hosts I developed a pretty elaborate, demonstrative analysis for the workshop which I am happy to share publicly here.
HTML: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
PDF: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
HTML: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
PDF: betanalpha.github.io/assets/chapt...
Great news today for note-taking: logseq database feature branch got merged into master after two year of limbo. Very excited to stop using obsidian for notes and switch back to it!
github.com/logseq/logseq
github.com/logseq/logseq
GitHub - logseq/logseq: A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge management and collaboration. Download link: http://github.com/logseq/logseq/releases. roadmap: http://trello.com/b/8txSM12...
A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge management and collaboration. Download link: http://github.com/logseq/logseq/releases. roadmap: http://trello.com/b/8txSM12G/roadmap - logseq/lo...
github.com
May 29, 2025 at 6:08 PM
Great news today for note-taking: logseq database feature branch got merged into master after two year of limbo. Very excited to stop using obsidian for notes and switch back to it!
github.com/logseq/logseq
github.com/logseq/logseq
Looking for something fun to do on a Friday night? Love maths but want to help out in applied infectious disease modelling?
Have I got a fun time for you (solving some more special cases distribution combinations as discussed here).
primarycensored.epinowcast.org/articles/ana...
Have I got a fun time for you (solving some more special cases distribution combinations as discussed here).
primarycensored.epinowcast.org/articles/ana...
Analytic solutions for censored delay distributions
primarycensored.epinowcast.org
February 7, 2025 at 10:24 PM
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Note that one of these projects is about delay estimation (described by one 5 year old as double extra boring) but critical to get right for most/all downstream modelling use cases.
Amazing opportunity: a few PhD positions in Health Analytics, Epidemic Modelling and Health Economics available with myself and colleagues from @mrc-outbreak.bsky.social, @ccmid.bsky.social and @ukhsa.bsky.social. Please apply/circulate widely!
January 29, 2025 at 5:27 PM
Note that one of these projects is about delay estimation (described by one 5 year old as double extra boring) but critical to get right for most/all downstream modelling use cases.
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
For a few years, I have been paying out of pocket for the epinowcast forum as I thought it was important to have a venue for people to collab. There is some great stuff kicking off at the moment which is lovely to see.
community.epinowcast.org/t/include-a-...
community.epinowcast.org/t/include-a-...
Include a simple reference model
Baselines considered: no correction baseline (naïve but not realistically what epi colleagues would expect) cut off last few weeks and repeat the previous week(s) (i.e. thinking that the data will b...
community.epinowcast.org
January 22, 2025 at 11:16 AM
For a few years, I have been paying out of pocket for the epinowcast forum as I thought it was important to have a venue for people to collab. There is some great stuff kicking off at the moment which is lovely to see.
community.epinowcast.org/t/include-a-...
community.epinowcast.org/t/include-a-...
This is a very interesting talk by @scarpino.bsky.social continuing the exploration of the predictability of an influenza season using fundamental and practical methods
www.youtube.com/live/8RslYIn...
www.youtube.com/live/8RslYIn...
YouTube
Share your videos with friends, family, and the world
www.youtube.com
January 17, 2025 at 5:08 PM
This is a very interesting talk by @scarpino.bsky.social continuing the exploration of the predictability of an influenza season using fundamental and practical methods
www.youtube.com/live/8RslYIn...
www.youtube.com/live/8RslYIn...
The deadline for the Epidemics special issue on Artificial Intelligence for Infectious Disease Dynamics has been extended to 30 April 2025, so there is still time to submit your paper 📝
Feel free to contact me or another guest editor for more information 😊
www.sciencedirect.com/journal/epid...
Feel free to contact me or another guest editor for more information 😊
www.sciencedirect.com/journal/epid...
January 7, 2025 at 3:26 PM
The deadline for the Epidemics special issue on Artificial Intelligence for Infectious Disease Dynamics has been extended to 30 April 2025, so there is still time to submit your paper 📝
Feel free to contact me or another guest editor for more information 😊
www.sciencedirect.com/journal/epid...
Feel free to contact me or another guest editor for more information 😊
www.sciencedirect.com/journal/epid...
The studies informing stratified parameters in IDD models often have partitions (e.g age group) different from the model partitions. Most papers takes the median/mean estimates, but a correct solution exists: see this great paper/R pkg (C. Pearson, @lucygoodfellow.bsky.social @mert0248.bsky.social)
December 6, 2024 at 4:57 PM
The studies informing stratified parameters in IDD models often have partitions (e.g age group) different from the model partitions. Most papers takes the median/mean estimates, but a correct solution exists: see this great paper/R pkg (C. Pearson, @lucygoodfellow.bsky.social @mert0248.bsky.social)
Very interesting write up on OWD pandemic work. In general, it’s always surprising how small most teams doing important thing are.
When COVID-19 spread worldwide, our small team at Our World in Data — only 8 people at the start of 2020! — pivoted to compiling daily data of global importance.
This is the behind-the-scenes story of how it happened: https://ourworldindata.org/owid-covid-history
This is the behind-the-scenes story of how it happened: https://ourworldindata.org/owid-covid-history
How our team at Our World in Data became a global data source on COVID-19
Our small team made COVID-19 data clear, reliable, and accessible to a global audience. This is how it happened.
ourworldindata.org
November 19, 2024 at 7:32 PM
Very interesting write up on OWD pandemic work. In general, it’s always surprising how small most teams doing important thing are.
Reposted by Joseph Lemaitre
Our framework for combining standard epi models with an economic dynamic decision model is up on medRxiv! super flexible and excited to see where this project goes next www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
Modeling dynamic disease-behavior feedbacks for improved epidemic prediction and response
Human behavior significantly influences infectious disease transmission, yet traditional models often overlook this factor, limiting predictions of disease and the associated socioeconomic impacts. We...
www.medrxiv.org
November 19, 2024 at 1:57 PM
Our framework for combining standard epi models with an economic dynamic decision model is up on medRxiv! super flexible and excited to see where this project goes next www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
Just discovered this excellent book on genomics from Tanja Stadler et al. Free pdf offered here: decodinggenomes.org. The chapters I've read hit a biology/statistics sweet spot for me and probably other IDD researchers.
November 14, 2024 at 2:39 PM
Just discovered this excellent book on genomics from Tanja Stadler et al. Free pdf offered here: decodinggenomes.org. The chapters I've read hit a biology/statistics sweet spot for me and probably other IDD researchers.