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Mar 7, 2005 · Mathematics professor Harold Layton was an unusual graduate student back in the 1980s. While the other Duke students stuck to theorems and proofs, Layton turned his attention to something more ordinary: urine. For his dissertation he created a mathematical model of how the kidney combines water and waste to produce the familiar yellow stream.
- In Memoriam: Math Professor Harold E. Layton
Harold Layton was a first-rate mathematician and a deeply...
- In Memoriam: Math Professor Harold E. Layton
Mathematics professor Harold Layton was an unusual graduate student back in the 1980s. While the other Duke students stuck to theorems and proofs, Layton turned his attention to something more ...
Mar 27, 2024 · Harold Layton was a first-rate mathematician and a deeply moral and kind man. I’ll start by reviewing his professional career. Harold received a Ph.D. in Mathematics from Duke in 1986 and was a visiting member of the Courant Institute at New York University from 1986 until 1988, when he came back to Duke as Assistant Professor of Mathematics.
Sep 1, 2022 · Layton had known the odds going in — during the past 20 years, there have been more than 160 failed attempts to develop a drug to treat Alzheimer’s disease — but the news about Harold’s drug trial still felt like a punch in the stomach. “Some people cling to hope,” she said. “I find hope cruel.
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Mar 11, 2019 · The paper, titled A Computational Model of Epithelial Solute and Water Transport along a Human Nephron, co-authored by Layton and Duke University's Professor Harold Layton, was recently published by the online journal PLOS Computational Biology.
Harold E. Layton received the A.B. degree in mathematics from Asbury College, Wilmore, KY, in 1979, the M.S. degree in physics from the University of Kentucky, Lexington, in 1980, and the Ph.D. degree in mathematics from Duke University, Durham, NC, in 1986.