Kirschner graduated from Tulane University in 1985, and completed her Ph.D. there in 1991.[3] Her dissertation, Mathematical Modeling of the AIDS Virus in Epidemiology and Immunology, was jointly supervised by Jerome Goldstein and James (Mac) Hyman.[4]
She was president of the Society for Mathematical Biology from 2017 to 2019.[5] She is a speaker of the IBS Biomedical Mathematics Group.[6]
Recognition
Kirschner was listed as one of the inaugural Fellows of the Society for Mathematical Biology, in the class of 2017.[5] She was named a SIAM Fellow in the 2021 class of fellows, "for contributions to modeling pathogen-host interactions and host immune response in infectious diseases and training in mathematical biology/immunology".[7]