Ying Bai mainly focuses on Bartonella, Bartonella Infection, Microbiology, Bartonella elizabethae and Phylogenetic tree. Ying Bai combines subjects such as Zoology, Veterinary medicine, Disease reservoir, Genotype and Sequence analysis with his study of Bartonella. His Bartonella Infection study frequently draws parallels with other fields, such as Polymerase chain reaction.
His Microbiology study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Multiplex polymerase chain reaction, Pulicidae, Ceratophyllidae, Flea and Yersinia pestis. Bartonella grahamii, Peromyscus and Bartonella washoensis is closely connected to Bartonella tribocorum in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Bartonella elizabethae. Ying Bai works mostly in the field of Phylogenetic tree, limiting it down to topics relating to Phylogenetics and, in certain cases, Apodemus, as a part of the same area of interest.
His primary areas of investigation include Bartonella, Bartonella Infection, Zoology, Virology and Veterinary medicine. His research on Bartonella concerns the broader Microbiology. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Disease reservoir, Bartonella elizabethae, Genotype, rpoB and Polymerase chain reaction.
His Zoology research integrates issues from Transmission, Vector, Host and Bartonella species. The various areas that Ying Bai examines in his Virology study include Spotted fever and Lymphatic disease. His Veterinary medicine research includes elements of Bartonella rochalimae and Bartonella washoensis.
His primary areas of study are Bartonella, Zoology, Bartonella species, Lyme disease and Borrelia burgdorferi. Ying Bai studied Bartonella and Evolutionary biology that intersect with Host adaptation and Molecular phylogenetics. His Zoology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Carriage, Abundance, Bartonella tribocorum and Yersinia pestis.
His Bartonella species course of study focuses on Ecology and Vector and Transmission. His Lyme disease research includes elements of Nymph and Tick. In the subject of general Borrelia burgdorferi, his work in Ixodes scapularis is often linked to Borrelia garinii, thereby combining diverse domains of study.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Bartonella strains from ground squirrels are identical to Bartonella washoensis isolated from a human patient.
Michael Kosoy;Mike Murray;Robert D. Gilmore;Ying Bai.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology (2003)
Bartonella tamiae sp. nov., a Newly Recognized Pathogen Isolated from Three Human Patients from Thailand
Michael Kosoy;Christina Morway;Kelly W. Sheff;Ying Bai.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology (2008)
Development of a Novel Genus-specific Real-time PCR Assay for Detection and Differentiation of Bartonella Species and Genotypes
Maureen H. Diaz;Ying Bai;Lile Malania;Jonas M. Winchell.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology (2012)
Detection of Novel Bartonella Strains and Yersinia pestis in Prairie Dogs and Their Fleas (Siphonaptera: Ceratophyllidae and Pulicidae) Using Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
Heather L. Stevenson;Ying Bai;Michael Y. Kosoy;John A. Montenieri.
Journal of Medical Entomology (2003)
Identification of Bartonella infections in febrile human patients from Thailand and their potential animal reservoirs.
Michael Kosoy;Ying Bai;Kelly Sheff;Christina Morway.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (2010)
PREVALENCE AND DIVERSITY OF BARTONELLA IN RODENTS OF NORTHERN THAILAND: A COMPARISON WITH BARTONELLA IN RODENTS FROM SOUTHERN CHINA
Kevin T. Castle;Michael Kosoy;Kriangkrai Lerdthusnee;Lori Phelan.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (2004)
Bartonella spp. in bats, Kenya.
Michael Kosoy;Ying Bai;Tarah Lynch;Ivan V. Kuzmin.
Emerging Infectious Diseases (2010)
Bartonella spp. in Bats, Guatemala.
Ying Bai;Michael Kosoy;Sergio Recuenco;Danilo Alvarez.
Emerging Infectious Diseases (2011)
Characterization of Bartonella strains isolated from black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus).
Ying Bai;Michael Kosoy;Andrew Martin;Chris Ray.
Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases (2008)
Persistent infection or successive reinfection of deer mice with Bartonella vinsonii subsp. arupensis.
Ying Bai;Charles H. Calisher;Michael Y. Kosoy;J. Jeffrey Root.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology (2011)
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