1) Computational approaches for simulating luminogenesis, Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology, 131, 173-185 (2022).2) Numerical study on spindle positioning using phase field method, Physical Biology 16, 016005 (2019).3) Study on Multicellular Systems Using a Phase Field Model, PLoS One, 7, e33501 (2012).Makiko Nonomura is a professor at the Department of Mathematical Information Engineering, College of Industrial Technology, Nihon University. After leaving the Physics Department of the Faculty of Science at Ochanomizu University, she completed the master’s course of the Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences at Ochanomizu University in 1997 and the doctoral course of the Graduate School of Humanities and Sciences at the same university in 2000. The title of her doctoral thesis was “Dynamics of microemulsion and sponge phases.” She started her research career at Hokkaido University as a frontier researcher at RIKEN in 2000. She worked at Hiroshima University from 2001 to 2009, and spent eight months from November 2005 at McGill University in Canada under a JSPS Fellowship. From 2009, she worked as a PRESTO researcher at Chiba University, and in 2011 she moved to Nihon University. Her current main research interest is the mathematical modeling of cells, and she participates in Zoom meetings with HFSP project members regarding organoid formation. Dr. Nonomura is a member of the Physical Society of Japan (JPS), the Japanese Society for Mathematical Biology (JSMB), and the Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers (JSME).Regular meetings on Zoom- -26Research AchievementsMakiko NONOMURAProfessor, Department of Mathematical Information Engineering
元のページ ../index.html#28