Contact
Pfaffenwaldring 9
70550 Stuttgart
Germany
Subject
Nicole Radde's research focuses on the modeling and analysis of intracellular regulation processes. The ultimate goal is the development and application of mathematical methods to facilitate a better systemic understanding of these processes for particular subsystems and the organization of molecular regulation mechanisms in general. Her group works in close collaboration with partners from molecular and cellular biology. She focuses in particular on the following topics: Dynamic modeling of intracellular regulation processes, Statistical sampling-based approaches for parameter estimation and predictions, Analysis methods for intracellular regulation networks based on their network topology
Education and Degrees
- 2003 – 2007 PhD student at the Center for Applied Computer Science (ZAIK) at the University of Cologne
- 2002 'Erstes Staatsexamen' (First State Examination) in Physics and Mathematics, Technical University Darmstadt
- 2002 Diploma in Phyiscs, Technical University Darmstadt, thesis title 'Neutrino Transport in Proto-Neutronensternen', 'Nuclei, Hadrons and Quarks (NHQ) group', Prof. Jochen Wambach
- 1997 – 2002 Studies in Physics, TU Darmstadt
- 1996 – 2002 'Lehramt' Mathematics and Physics, TU Darmstadt
Professional Career
- 2015 – present Professor for Systems Theory in Systems Biology at the Institute for Systems Theory and Automatic Control (IST) at the University of Stuttgart.
- 2008 – 2015 Junior Professor for Systems Theory in Systems Biology at the Institute for Systems Theory and Automatic Control (IST) at the University of Stuttgart.
- 2007 – 2008 Postdoc at the Institute for Medical Informatics, Statistics and Epidemiology (IMISE) of the University Leipzig in Korbinian Strimmer's group 'Statistics and Computational Biology'.
- 2007 PhD thesis 'Modeling Non-Linear Dynamic Phenomena in Biochemical Networks', Center for Applied Computer Science (ZAIK) at the University of Cologne, Prof. Ulrich Faigle