The 18 research articles of this volume discuss the major themes that
have emerged from mathematical and statistical research in the
epidemiology of HIV. The opening paper reviews important recent
contributions. Five sections follow: Statistical Methodology and
Forecasting, Infectivity and the HIV, Heterogeneity and HIV Transmission
Dynamics, Social Dynamics and AIDS, and The Immune System and The HIV.
In each, leading experts in AIDS epidemiology present the recent
results. Some address the role of variable infectivity, heterogeneous
mixing, and long periods of infectiousness in the dynamics of HIV;
others concentrate on parameter estimation and short-term forecasting.
The last section looks at the interaction between the HIV and the immune
system.