Prior to joining qPharmetra in August 2018, Farrah completed her post-doctoral studies at the Mathematical Biosciences Institute focusing on biochemical models for human physiology and disease. Her research used a variety of mathematical methods from applied dynamical systems, numerical analysis, and biostatistics to understand critical issues in depression, arsenic detoxification, gender differences in one-carbon metabolism and personalized medicine. Farrah attended the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga for her masters, concentrating in Applied Statistics, then completed her PhD in Applied Mathematics from Colorado State University. Her work focused on structures of viral capsids and understanding nucleic acid-protein interactions in HIV-1. Farrah is especially interested in quantitative methods to characterize biological systems, disease processes, and mechanisms of PKPD.
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