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For more information about the ITEST, please visit www.nwabr.org/education/itest.html

BioVis 2016 Photos.

The steam coming out of the manhole and the amber lighting was reminiscent of SoHo in New York

For more information about the ITEST, please visit www.nwabr.org/education/itest.html

Jim awaits the first dissertation defense in School of Informatics history.

CRI Workshop Learning Series

Bioinformatics Workshop 2014

Harper Court, Chicago

 

Photo by David Christopher

Bioinformatics day 2010

28.5.2010 Viikki, Helsinki

Illustration on the shear volume of information discovered by bioinformatic scientists in genes.

SD EPSCoR and SDSU recently partnered to hold a bioinformatics workshop. Bioinformatics is an interdisciplinary field that develops methods and software tools for understanding biological data. As an interdisciplinary field of science, bioinformatics combines computer science, statistics, mathematics, and engineering to analyze and interpret biological data. Participants learned about tool discovery, meta-genomics, gene regulation and RNA-Seq. The workshop also showcased some of the bioinformatics tools developed by BioSNTR researchers. Thirty-four research professionals participated in the event.

Yuan Zhang from OSC gives an introduction to bioinformatics - OCCBIO '06

CRI Workshop Learning Series

Bioinformatics Workshop 2014

University of Chicago

 

Photo by David Christopher

Kai Fan, Computational Biology and Bioinformatics. 2018 Ph.D. Hooding Ceremony. 2018-05-12.

Advanced Bachelor of Bioinformatics 2023-2024

BioVis 2016 Photos.

Howest Proclamatie Advanced Bachelor of Bioinformatics en

Bachelor Biomedische Laboratoriumtechnologie

 

Global Biomedical Informatics: Innovation, Governance, Societal Engagement

  

Rising Powers Policy Workshop

Wednesday 18 February 2015

University of Sussex, Building Arts C, Room Number 333

 

Invitation only

 

The heralded revolutions in global medicine and healthcare fuelled by the life sciences and genomics require the harnessing of the ever-increasing waves of data that are being generated, through development and deployment of informatics tools, databases and data interpretation. There is a need to better understand the governance and steering of bioinformatics by national governments’ and other governance actors’ on the global stage. Social and scientific trends such as open access and consumerisation underpin developments in the field. This workshop addresses this challenge by bringing together a range of stakeholders from national and international bioinformatics initiatives, private sector bioinformatics services, genomic scientists and social scientists studying the field. Key topics for discussion include: Issues of disciplinary work and skills in bioinformatics and computational biology; Role of global centres of bioinformatics innovation; Educational and investment policies; Role of citizen and academic engagement; Data privacy; Open innovation, IP and data ownership; Outsourcing patterns; Genomic-clinical data linkage.

 

Organised by members of the ESRC Rising Powers ‘State strategies of governance in global medical biotech innovation: the impact of China and India’, KCL and University of Sussex.

  

Form more information, please see our website: www.sussex.ac.uk/globalhealthpolicy/events/workshops/glob....

Howest Proclamatie Advanced Bachelor of Bioinformatics en

Bachelor Biomedische Laboratoriumtechnologie

Pro: I like the color pattern in this tunnel

Con: I almost got hit by a car taking these pictures.

CRI Workshop Learning Series

Bioinformatics Workshop 2014

Harper Court, Chicago

 

Photo by Sara Serritella/ITM

For more information about the ITEST, please visit www.nwabr.org/education/itest.html

CRI Workshop Learning Series

Bioinformatics Workshop 2014

University of Chicago

 

Photo by David Christopher

El vice-director del Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO) y Director del Centro Nacional de Bioinformática impartió la conferencia 'La Bioinformática en el Análisis de Genomas y la Medicina Personalizada' en la Facultad de Informática de la Universidad de Murcia.

17 de junio

 

Global Biomedical Informatics: Innovation, Governance, Societal Engagement

  

Rising Powers Policy Workshop

Wednesday 18 February 2015

University of Sussex, Building Arts C, Room Number 333

 

Invitation only

 

The heralded revolutions in global medicine and healthcare fuelled by the life sciences and genomics require the harnessing of the ever-increasing waves of data that are being generated, through development and deployment of informatics tools, databases and data interpretation. There is a need to better understand the governance and steering of bioinformatics by national governments’ and other governance actors’ on the global stage. Social and scientific trends such as open access and consumerisation underpin developments in the field. This workshop addresses this challenge by bringing together a range of stakeholders from national and international bioinformatics initiatives, private sector bioinformatics services, genomic scientists and social scientists studying the field. Key topics for discussion include: Issues of disciplinary work and skills in bioinformatics and computational biology; Role of global centres of bioinformatics innovation; Educational and investment policies; Role of citizen and academic engagement; Data privacy; Open innovation, IP and data ownership; Outsourcing patterns; Genomic-clinical data linkage.

 

Organised by members of the ESRC Rising Powers ‘State strategies of governance in global medical biotech innovation: the impact of China and India’, KCL and University of Sussex.

  

Form more information, please see our website: www.sussex.ac.uk/globalhealthpolicy/events/workshops/glob....

"We've been decoding the genome for awhile. Researchers used to focus on single exposure causes of disease, which although helpful, didn't account for other factors humans face." - Chirag Patel, Ph.D., a leading Biomedical data scientist answers with vast amounts of information on the environment and human genome.

 

Within the highly complex and nuanced relationship between environment and the human genome, Chirag Patel zeroes in by concentrating on the interplay of genetics and exposomes (defined as the totality of non-genetic factors, including drugs, diet, infectious agents, and pollutants) to define who we really are.

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