Natalia Komarova
Natalia L. Komarova is a Russian-American applied mathematician whose research concerns the mathematical modeling of cancer, the evolution of language, gun control, pop music, and other complex systems. She is a Professor of Mathematics and Dean's Scholar at the University of California, San Diego.
Education and career
Komarova studied physics at Moscow State University, earning a master's degree there in 1993. She completed her Ph.D. in 1998 at the University of Arizona. Her dissertation, Essays on Nonlinear Waves: Patterns under Water; Pulse Propagation through Random Media, was supervised by Alan C. Newell.After postdoctoral research at the University of Warwick, the Institute for Advanced Study, and the University of Chicago, Komarova became a lecturer at the University of Leeds in 2000. She moved to Rutgers University in 2003 and to the University of California, Irvine in 2004. At UC Irvine, she was named a Chancellor's Professor in 2017. In 2024 she moved to University of California, San Diego.
Recognition
Komarova won a Sloan Research Fellowship in 2005. In 2023, Komarova was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.Books
Komarova is married to UC Irvine evolutionary biologist Dominik Wodarz. She has written three books with Wodarz:- Computational Biology of Cancer: Lecture Notes and Mathematical Modeling
- Dynamics Of Cancer: Mathematical Foundations Of Oncology
- ''Targeted Cancer Treatment in Silico: Small Molecule Inhibitors and Oncolytic Viruses''