Additional subjects include history and iconography of safe water, communicating risks to water consumers and a bottled water versus tap water taste test as part of the discussion on aesthetic water quality parameters. A field trip to a local water treatment plant in included. Student Learning Outcomes: By the end of this course, students will be expected to: Recognize the global occurrence of waterborne contaminants and related health impacts.
Understand water quality monitoring and control of key water quality constituents. Appreciate the complexities of the regulatory process as it pertains to public drinking water systems in the US and abroad. Read and synthesize published and unpublished sources of information regarding drinking water and health.
Prepare a literature review in journal submission format. Student Learning Outcomes: Obtain marketable skills eg. StoryMaps and Dashboards. Terms offered: Fall , Fall , Fall This course is built around an evolutionary perspective of the basis of human mating behavior and explores a variety of topics in human sexualtiy with the goal of helping us to understand ourselves and to understand and accept the behavior of others. The course takes examples from art, sociology, anatomy, anthropology, physiology, contemporary politics, and history to explore the richness of human sexual behavior and reproduction and the interaction between our biology and our culture.
Between and , considerable attention was focused on rapid population growth. Afterwards, the attention has faded and investment in family planning evaporated. Family size among some of the poorest women is increasing.
This course seeks to provide an understanding of the relationships between population growth, poverty, women's autonomy, and health. It explores the political "fashions" underlying changing paradigms among demographers, and economists, and development specialists. Terms offered: Spring , Fall , Spring This course explores the development of innovations to improve the health of populations, with a primary focus on technologies for children ages 0 to teen and older adults. Significant emphasis is placed on health equity in exploring these customer groups.
Human-centered design is used as the overarching approach to problem solving, which contributes mindsets and skills, as well as mechanisms for collaboration. Terms offered: Fall , Spring , Fall Required for students intending to complete an honors thesis in their senior year.
This course will document your completion of an senior honors thesis in Public Health. You will focus on writing and publishing scientific documents and presenting scientific information in mixed media written and oral to diverse audiences scientists and the general public. Topics covered will vary from semester to semester and will be announced at the beginning of each term. Summer: 6 weeks - hours of lecture per week 8 weeks - hours of lecture per week.
Terms offered: Spring , Spring , Summer 8 Week Session Supervised experience relevant to specific aspects of public health in off-campus organizations. Regular individual meetings with faculty sponsor and written reports required.
Summer: 6 weeks - hours of independent study per week 8 weeks - hours of independent study per week. Summer: 6 weeks - hours of directed group study per week 8 weeks - hours of directed group study per week.
Terms offered: Spring , Spring , Spring Enrollment restrictions apply; see the Introduction to Courses and Curricula section of this catalog. Barbara Abrams, Professor. Weight and weight gain in women during pregnancy, postpartum and menopause Maternal weight, nutrition, social factors and perinatal health outcomes Could expressed and heat-treated breast milk prevent perinatal hiv transmission.
Research Profile. Jennifer Ahern, Associate Professor. Mental health, epidemiology, social epidemiology, population health, neighborhood characteristics and health, methodological issues and novel methodological applications in social, traumatic events, substance use, behavioral health, birth outcomes and maternal health. Genevieve M. Ames, Adjunct Professor. Anthropology of health, healing, substance abuse, quantitative and qualitative methods, social organization theory. Colette Coco Auerswald, Associate Professor.
Amin Azzam, Associate Clinical Professor. Medical education scholarship: Specifically, the efficacy of various instructional approaches in stimulating medical students' acquisition, retention, and application of content knowledge in their evolving roles as clinicians.
Bachrach, Assistant Clinical Professor. Health of underserved populations, Adolescent health, Access to care, Violence prevention, Language barriers and health literacy, International health, Nutrition.
Balmes, Professor in Residence. Effects of exposure to pollution, effects of pesticides on respiratory health, arsenic in drinking water, psychosocial stress. Lisa F. Barcellos, Associate Professor. Public health, genetic epidemiology, human genetics, autoimmune diseases, multiple schlerosis, lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, epigenetics, genomics, computational biology. Michael Bates, Adjunct Professor. Air pollution, water pollution, environmental epidemiology, occupational epidemiology.
Stefano M. Bertozzi, Professor. Joan Bloom, Professor. Health policy and management, cancer prevention, early detection and long term survival, reducing disparities in access to health care. Patrick Bradshaw, Assistant Professor. Timothy Brown, Associate Adjunct Professor. Health insurance benefit design, public health services and systems, mental health economics, dental economics, social capital, econometrics. Gertrude Case Buehring, Professor. Public health, use of cells in breast fluids for diagnostic purposes, viruses and human cancer, role of bovine leukemia virus in causing human breast cancer.
Ralph Catalano, Professor. Mental health services, economic antecendents, stress related illness. John Colford, Professor. Public health, epidemiology, infectious diseases, biostatistics, meta-analysis.
Norman Constantine, Clinical Professor. Adolescent sexual health, adolescent health behavior, adolescent health policy, sexuality education, research bias, motivated reasoning, policy use and misuse of research evidence, measurement and research design. Jason Corburn, Associate Professor. Urban health, informal settlements, global public health, urban climate change, environmental impact assessment, mediation, environmental justice.
Ronald Dahl, Professor. Decision-making, adolescence, brain development, behavioral and emotional health, pubertal maturation, affective neuroscience, social neuroscience. Julianna Deardorff, Associate Professor. Adolescent health, puberty, sexual development, cultural factors, contextual factors. William H. Dow, Professor. Health economics, international health, economic demography. Sandrine Dudoit, Professor.
Genomics, classification, statistical computing, biostatistics, cross-validation, density estimation, genetic mapping, high-throughput sequencing, loss-based estimation, microarray, model selection, multiple hypothesis testing, prediction, RNA-Seq. Ellen Eisen, Adjunct Professor. Methods in occupational epidemiology. Maria Ekstrand, Associate Adjunct Professor.
Brenda Eskenazi, Professor. Public health, epidemiology, biostatistics, maternal and child health. Richard Feachem, Professor. Economic development, development financing, global health, health policy, health systems, malaria elimination.
Darlene Francis, Associate Professor. Biological basis of health disparities, developmental programming, stress, environment x gene interactions, animal models, biopsychosocial approach to health and well-being. Paul Gertler, Professor. Impact evaluation, health economics. Joel William Grube, Adjunct Professor. Sylvia Guendelman, Professor.
Public health, maternal and child health, health and social behavior, health policy and management, specialty area in multicultural health.
Jodi Halpern, Professor. Public health, bioethics, patient autonomy. Helen Halpin, Professor. Public health, health policy and management, health services and policy analysis. Katharine Hammond, Professor. Public health, environmental health sciences. Kim Harley, Associate Adjunt Professor.
Reproductive health, prenatal health. Eva Harris, Professor. Public health, infectious diseases. Lia Haskin, Associate Professor. Poverty, obesity, child development, public health nutrition, global health, psychosocial and biological determinants of health, overweight, nutritional and epidemiologic transition, chronic disease, malnutrition, child health and development, early experience, inequality and health disparities, Latino health, Mexican-Americans and other immigrant groups, stress hormones, salivary cortisol.
Denise Herd, Professor. Public health, epidemiology, specialty area in multicultural health, behaviorial science.
Seth Holmes, Assistant Professor. Immigration and migration, medical anthropology with foci on social theory and ethnography, social studies of medicine and science, social difference related to race, social difference related to socioeconomic status, social difference related to citizenship, social difference related to gender, social difference related to sexuality, the naturalization and normalization of social hierarchies and health disparities, social suffering and symbolic violence, urban and rural Latin America and North America, population health with focus on global health, population health with focus on health disparities, population health with focus on social determinants of health.
Alan Hubbard, Associate Professor. Causal inference, Statistical issues in infectious disease, Bioinformatics. Public health, health disparities, interventions, community-based participatory research. William J. Jagust, Professor. Neuroscience, cognition, brain aging, dementia, imaging, Alzheimerandamp, ,s disease. Nicholas Jewell, Professor. Douglas Jutte, Assistant Adjunct Professor.
Health resilience and vulnerability in children, The interaction of biological and social risk factors in early childhood and their relationship to long-term health and educational outcomes. Ann Keller, Associate Professor.
Political science, health politics, public policy, public administration, disaster response, expertise in public decision-making.
Catherine Koshland, Professor. Air pollution, metals, energy, resources, environmental human health, mechanistic analyses of combustion products in flow reactors, control strategies in urban airsheds, pollutant formation, chlorinated hydrocarbons, particulates, industrial ecology.
Barbara Laraia, Associate Professor. Nutrition, obesity, Food Insecurity, Perinatal Health, diabetes. Lexin Li, Associate Professor. Neuroimaging data analysis, networks data analysis, personalized recommendation, statistical genetics, computational biology, dimension reduction, variable selection, high dimensional regressions, statistical machine learning, data mining, computational statistics. Fenyong Liu, Professor. Health disparities, children, schools, policy, nutrition, physical activity, obesity, accelerometers, physical education.
John Marshall, Assistant Professor. Utilize mathematical models to predict the utility of genetic control strategies for a variety of mosquito-borne diseases. Guy Micco, Clinical Professor.
Rachel Morello-Frosch, Professor. Race and class determinants of the distribution of health risks associated with air pollution among diverse communities in the United States. Mahasin Mujahid, Assistant Professor. Linda Neuhauser, Clinical Professor. Communication, public health, health literacy, participatory design of health programs. Osagie Obasogie, Professor.
Law, bioethics, reproductive and genetic technologies. Emily Ozer, Professor. Mental health, health and social behavior, clinical and community psychology, adolescent development, school-based health promotion.
Nancy Padian, Adjunct Professor. HIV, epidemiology, reproductive health, sexually transmitted infections, impact evaluations. Maya Petersen, Assistant Professor. Daniel A. Portnoy, Professor. Mammalian cells, molecular and cellular basis of microbial pathogenesis, defense against infection, listeria monocytogenes, cell biology of infection, mechanisms of secretion.
Malcolm Potts, Professor. Public health, maternal and child health, health and social behavior. Ndola Prata, Associate Professor in Residence. Community-base access to care, maternal mortality, population and family planning, safe abortion, adolescent reproductive health in developing countries, postpartum hemorrhage. Arthur L. Reingold, Professor. Public health, epidemiology, infectious diseases, biostatistics. Justin Remais, Associate Professor. Environmental dynamics of infectious diseases, Global environmental change and health, Methodological issues in the projection of infectious disease risks in response to environmental change Optimizing infectious disease surveillance in low- and middle-income countries.
Lee Riley, Professor. Public health, infectious diseases, molecular epidemiology, global health, tuberculosis, drug-resistant infections, slum health. James Robinson, Professor. Public health, health policy and management, environmental health sciences, health services and policy analysis. Hector P. Rodriguez, Associate Professor. Thomas Rundall, Professor Emeritus.
William Satariano, Professor. Aging, public health, epidemiology, biostatistics, health and social behavior. Richard M. Scheffler, Professor. Public health, biostatistics.
George Sensabaugh, Professor Emeritus. Molecular epidemiology, microbial population genetics, forensic science, forensic biology. James Seward, Clinical Professor. Stephen Shortell, Professor. Organizational correlates of quality and outcomes of care, evaluation of total quality management and community-based health improvement initiatives. Martyn T. Smith, Professor. Cancer, genomics, toxicology, molecular epidemiology, exposome. Lonnie Snowden, Professor. Nutrition, maternal-child health, early childhood health, oral health, child health in developing countries, childrenand ,s health in child care, parenting education, health education for low literacy populations, health disparities.
Sarah Stanley, Assistant Professor. Mechanisms of pathogenesis and immune subversion in tuberculosis, protective immunity to tuberculosis, metabolic interactions between hosts and pathogens, development of novel therapeutics for tuberculosis, scientific capacity building, tuberculosis.
Richard S. Stephens, Professor. Molecular genetics, microbiology, infectious disease, pathogenesis. Information technology and communication systems to improve community and population health, Mobile and internet technologies and communication systems to support disease management, disease prevention, and health promotion Information technology and communication systems to improve policy. Mark J. Van Der Laan, Professor. Statistics, computational biology and genomics, censored data and survival analysis, medical research, inference in longitudinal studies.
Julia Walsh, Adjunct Professor. Reproductive health, Immunization, socioeconomic benefits, cost-effectiveness analysis, cost-benefit analysis, economic evaluation, global health equity, market size estimation in poor countries, contraception, maternal mortality among the poor, neonatal mortality risk factors analysis, millenium development goals.
Sangwei Lu, Adjunct Professor. Pathogenesis and stress response of Salmonella serovars, foodborne diseases. Gladys Block, Professor Emeritus. Nutrient status, disease relationships, dietary methods, oxidation and antioxidants. John Ellwood, Professor Emeritus. Financial Management, Public Sector Budgeting. Ernest Hook, Professor Emeritus. Public health, maternal and child health. Teh-wei Hu, Professor Emeritus. Health economics, public health, health policy and management, health services and policy analysis, specialty area in aging, specialty area in international health.
Meredith Minkler, Professor Emeritus. Public health, health and social behavior, community health education. Patricia Morgan, Professor Emeritus. Public health, community prevention programs.
Edward E. Penhoet, Professor Emeritus. Public health, health policy and management. David Ragland, Adjunct Professor Emeritus. Zak Sabry, Professor Emeritus. Public health, health and social behavior, health policy and management, public health nutrition.
Allan Smith, Professor Emeritus. Public health, epidemiology, biostatistics, environmental health sciences. Robert Spear, Professor Emeritus. Public health, environmental health science. Social epidemiology, community interventions. When you print this page, you are actually printing everything within the tabs on the page you are on: this may include all the Related Courses and Faculty, in addition to the Requirements or Overview.
If you just want to print information on specific tabs, you're better off downloading a PDF of the page, opening it, and then selecting the pages you really want to print. Declaring the Major Although the major remains capped impacted , the department encourages all qualified students to apply.
After completing the prerequisites , students should submit an application, which includes the following: A review of an applicant's academic preparation Coursework and GPA Two essays Statement of Purpose and Personal History Statement Resume or CV For more information, please see the School of Public Health website.
Summer Minor or Certificate Program Public health seeks to improve human health through the development and application of knowledge that prevents disease, protects the public from harm, and promotes health throughout the state, the nation, and the world. Major Requirements In addition to the University, campus, and college requirements, listed on the College Requirements tab, students must fulfill requirements specific to their major program.
Other exceptions to this requirement are noted as applicable. Please contact the Public Health Advisors for more information. A minimum grade point average GPA of 2. As always, if you have questions or need assistance in deciding how to move forward with this information you can reach the Public Health advisors at sphug berkeley.
EE Linear Systems 4. Representation and analysis of linear time-invariant systems primarily for the continuous time case.
Convolution, Fourier series and transform, Laplace transform, controls and communications applications. Fundamentals of digital audio along with an in-depth examination of the key factors that affect audio quality: room acoustics and human perception psychoacoustics.
EE Physical Electronics 4. Semiconductor device characteristics and applications. Physical models of electronic conduction in solids, p-n junctions, bipolar and field effect transistors and other solid-state devices.
Object-oriented programming techniques, basic data structures, and elementary complexity analysis for the modeling, simulation, and solution of engineering problems.
Introduction to concepts of randomness and uncertainty: probability, random variables, statistics. Applications to digital communications, signal processing, automatic control, computer engineering and computer science. Optimization design methods for system applications. Introduction to micro-electro-opto-mechanical systems; scaling effects on material properties, fluid flows, dynamical behavior; fabrication methods; design considerations for MEMS sensors and actuators.
Experiments and design project in digital signal processing e. Recommended preparation: EE Capstone design experience. EE Introduction to Power Systems 4. Components of power systems; analysis techniques in electrical power generation transmission and utilization; and environmental and economic considerations in system operations and planning.
Application of solid-state electronic devices to the design of linear and mixed-signal systems. Laboratory experiments and projects involving the design of electronic hardware.
EE Introduction to Computer Networks 4. Network architectures; layered protocols, network service interface; local, wide area, wireless networks; Internet protocols; link protocols; addressing; routing; flow control; software defined network; multimedia networks. EE Parallel and Distributed Computation 4. Introduction to parallel programming techniques, models and optimization strategies; Application mapping to multi-core, accelerator, GPU and cloud platforms; High Performance Computing and Data Science applications.
Intensive introduction to programming principles, discrete mathematics for computing, software design and software engineering concepts. Not available for credit to computer sciencemajors, graduate or undergraduate.
EE Computer Systems Organization 4. Register Transfer level machine organization; performance; arithmetic; pipelined processors; exceptions, out-of-order and speculative execution, cache, virtual memory, multi-core multi-threaded processors, cache coherence.
EE Introduction to Communication Systems 3. Analog and digital communication systems. Review of wireless, networking, and optical systems. Laboratory assignments including design, layout, extraction, simulation and automatic synthesis. Vibration measurement and analysis; simulation, design, and experimental verification of mechanical control systems; system identification; implementation of controllers; performance evaluation via experimentation and stimulation.
Fundamentals of digital signal processing covering: discrete time linear systems, quantization, sampling, Z-transforms, Fourier transforms, FFTs and filter design. EE x: Directed Research 1. Individual research and readings. Not available for graduate credit. EE a: Undergraduate Thesis 2.
For the undergraduate degree. Credit on acceptance of thesis. EE b: Undergraduate Thesis 2. Crosslist EE Solid State 4. Atomic electronic states, molecular bonding, crystal structures, diffraction, reciprocal lattice, Brillouin zones, crystal binding, lattice vibrations, specific heat, anharmonic effects, energy bands, metals, conductivity.
Rigorous coverage of probability, discrete and continuous random variables, functions of multiple random variables, covariance, correlation, random sequences, Markov chains, estimation, and introduction to statistics. Duplicates credit in former EE and EE EE Linear Algebra for Engineering 4. Introduction to linear algebra and matrix theory and their underlying concepts; applications to engineering problems; mathematically rigorous and foundational to other classes in communication, control, and signal processing.
EE Stochastic Processes 3. Probability theory and stochastic processes, including renewal theory, Markov chains, Brownian motion, martingales, and stochastic calculus. Applications in communication networks, queuing theory and financial systems. Statistics and data analysis emphasizing computation and problem solving: confidence intervals, hypothesis tests, bootstrap and Monte Carlo estimation, regression, Bayesian and statistical learning techniques.
Students will build a mathematical background for studying Financial Engineering. Emphasis is on analysis, proofs and examples. Mathworks Financial toolbox will be introduced. Speech production, acoustics, perception, synthesis, compression, recognition, transmission. Coding for speech, music, and CD-quality. Feature extraction. Echo cancellation. Audio, visual synchronization. Multimedia, Internet use. Power system planning, studies, and design; time-domain modeling and analysis of power-system networks; power flow, stability, fault, and economic dispatch analysis; symmetrical components.
Fundamentals of room acoustics, human perception psychoacoustics and digital audio signal processing algorithms to create immersive audio environments. Advanced scientific and engineering principles of biomedical imaging including magnetic resonance, X-ray computed tomography, ultrasound and single photon and positron emission tomography.
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