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Francesco Iorio

Research Group Leader, Research Group Leader, HT Computational Biology Research Centre

 

The 1st European Cancer Dependency Map Symposium was an international event organised by scientists at Human Technopole (Milan, IT), EMBL – European Bioinformatics Institute (Cambridge, UK), Wellcome Sanger Institute (Cambridge, UK) and ETH Zurich (Switzerland) on 8 May 2023 at Human Technopole.

Maithri Mahesh (left) and Hiteshi Dehal celebrate with Temoc after graduating with their master’s degrees in molecular and cell biology and bioinformatics and computational biology, respectively. Mahesh is now headed to New York City to work as a lab technician for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

Students in the biology class, Genomics and Bioinformatics, taught by Mathew Jones Rhoades, prepare their final projects in the Scripps Landstrum Laboratory at Knox College. Photo by Peter Bailley.

Howest Proclamatie Advanced Bachelor of Bioinformatics en

Bachelor Biomedische Laboratoriumtechnologie

Gavin Conant, assistant professor bioinformatics, teaches his genomics class in the Animal Sciences Research Center.

 

Photo by Kyle Spradley | © 2014 - Curators of the University of Missouri

Nick Goldman (UK) works at the European Bioinformatics Institute in Hinxton (UK).

 

credit: tom mesic

Fly Fishing & Treating Cancer: Same, Same but Different!

These modern-looking, sandstone-based buildings, known as FABI 1 and FABI 2, are similar in style and home to a postgraduate course that combines Biochemistry, Botany, Genetics, Microbiology, Plant Pathology, Zoology, Entomology and Plant Production. The buildings also house the Graduate School of Agriculture and Rural Development and advanced biotechnology laboratories. Designed by Willie Ooshuizen of the firm VDO Architects, FABI 1 was inaugurated in March 1999 and the adjacent FABI Bioinformatics Square (FABI 2), in 2002.

 

The fabi sqaure is one of the beautiful buildings around campus. it is a qiuet placeand it is very chilled.

 

source : www.up.ac.za

Bioinformatics Integrative Genomics

SriKrishna is about to have a talk with Kauravas and try for a amicable settlement. Panchali is worried, if he succeed to have such a settlement, she will fail to keep her vow. So she comes to Krishna to seek help. She shows him, her untied hair and make him remember her vow.

 

Peformers: Kalamandalam Mukundan (Krishna), Kalamandalam Vijayakumar (Panchali)

Stage: BioInformatica Indica'08, Centre for Bioinformatics, Kariyavattom Campus, University of Kerala.

--

www.sk.ru/en Boston, USA 18JUN2012

Representatives from the Skolkovo Foundation participated in the 2012 BIO International Convention at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center June 18-21. The conference, attended by pharmaceutical companies, teaching hospitals, venture capital firms and over 500 biotechnology companies, drew more than 15,000 attendees to the Boston area.

Christopher L. Barrett, Executive Director, Virginia Bioinformatics Institute/Professor of Computer Science, Virginia Tech. Dr. Barrett’s talk entitled “Massively Interactive Systems: Thinking and Deciding in the Age of Big Data"

 

Abstract: This talk discusses advanced computationally assisted reasoning about large interaction-dominated systems. Current questions in science, from the biochemical foundations of life to the scale of the world economy, involve details of huge numbers and levels of intricate interactions. Subtle indirect causal connections and vastly extended definitions of system boundaries dominate the immediate future of scientific research. Beyond sheer numbers of details and interactions, the systems are variously layered and structured in ways perhaps best described as networks. Interactions include, and often co-create, these morphological and dynamical features, which can interact in their own right. Such “massively interacting” systems are characterized by, among other things, large amounts of data and branching behaviors. Although the amount of associated data is large, the systems do not even begin to explore their entire phase spaces. Their study is characterized by advanced computational methods. Major methodological revisions seem to be indicated.

 

Heretofore unavailable and rapidly growing basic source data and increasingly powerful computing resources drive complex system science toward unprecedented detail and scale. There is no obvious reason for this direction in science to change. The cost of acquiring data has historically dominated scientific costs and shaped the research environment in terms of approaches and even questions. In the several years, as the costs of social data, biological data and physical data have plummeted on a per-unit basis and as the volume of data is growing exponentially, the cost drivers for scientific research have clearly shifted from data generation to storage and analytical computation-based methods. The research environment is rapidly being reshaped by this change and, in particular, the social and bio–sciences are revolutionized by it. Moreover, the study of socially– and biologically–coupled systems (e.g., societal infrastructures and infectious disease public health policy analysis) is in flux as computation-based methods begin to greatly expand the scope of traditional problems in revolutionary ways.

 

How does this situation serve to guide the development of “information portal technology” for complex system science and for decision support? An example of an approach to detailed computational analysis of social and behavioral interaction with physical and infrastructure effects in the immediate aftermath of a devastating disaster will be described in this context.

Full view available HERE.

 

Drisyam@ananthapuri, will showcase more than 125 exhibits from over a hundred photographers, across various photo categories, from 30th Aug to 1st Sep, 2009 at Museum Auditorium, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala.

 

The event is being inaugurated by internationally acclaimed Film Director and Cinematographer

Sri. Shaji N. Karun on 30th Aug, 2009 at 11.00 AM.

 

Renowned sculptor

Sri. Kanayi Kunhiraman (former Chairman, Lalit Kala Academy) and

the Director of Centre for Bioinformatics, University of Kerala

Dr. Achuthsankar S. Nair (former Director, C-DIT) will be the distinguished guests for the event.

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The BecA-ILRI Hub in collaboration with the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) held a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics from 7–18 September 2015 in Nairobi, Kenya. The workshop provides a learning forum for researchers in bioinformatics, computational biology as well as scientists utilizing computational methods in their research (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub\Marvin Wasonga)

Sketchnotes from a talk (and, to some extent, sales pitch) about DistilBio - a free online tool, developed by Metaome, for creating complex queries that access multiple biological data sources.

 

Ram also demonstrated a browser plugin (Firefox / Chrome) that highlights key terms on a page (e.g. in a publication abstract) and then allows you to export that set of terms to DistilBio, as seeds for a wider search.

Free Preview Lecture

 

"Biology, Translational Pharmacology & Toxicology Computation" Online Course at Udemy

 

www.udemy.com/biology-translational-pharmacology-toxicolo...

 

Description

 

Compared with conventional reductionist track that tries to demonstrate complicated ailments by examining human gene, Systems Biology is described by the vision that the implied mechanism of complicated ailments is likely to become the dysregulation of diverse interconnected cellular paths.

 

With the development of technology and science, Translational Pharmacology has developed as a modern branch to face today’s healthcare requirement and is believed as an expansion of clinical pharmacology.

 

Pharmacogenetics survey for the target of medication improvement has, in the past, concentrated almost completely on the impact of differences in human genes for giving rise to a particular adverse effect.

 

Computational Toxicology is actually a vibrant and quickly improving branch that combines data and information from a diversity of sources to improve mathematical and computer-founded models to better recognize and foresee adverse health impacts caused via chemicals, like pharmaceuticals and environmental pollutants.

 

A perfect ontology should authorize the mapping of datum at different standards of hierarchy. Computational designing of biological frameworks can accomplish combination along various dimensions.

 

In Summary, Bricolage is actually a methodological procedure that, in case of a public situation, alters and develops not only while but for the sake of the course activity. To do this demands a track of (Biology-Transnational Pharmacology-Toxicology Computation) as an interdisciplinarity approach where habitual disciplinary borders are not merely crossed but the analytical scopes of these diverse disciplines are actively used.

 

Who this course is for:

People from whole of the world, who have an interest in the following approaches: 1) Biology, 2) Translational Pharmacology, 3) Computational Toxicology, 4) Pharmacogenetics, 5) Computational Modeling Tactics, 6) The Art of Literature, 7) Chemical Biology, 8) Biochemistry, 9) Cheminformatics, 10) Bioinformatics, and 11) Biomedicine. And this course contains thirty-nine resource.

 

By Maram Abdel Nasser Taha Shtaya

Pharmacist, American Studies Instructor, Author and Researcher who is teaching on Udemy.

Bowling T-Shirt Contest (winner)

Free Preview Lecture

 

"Biology, Translational Pharmacology & Toxicology Computation" Online Course at Udemy

 

www.udemy.com/biology-translational-pharmacology-toxicolo...

 

Description

 

Compared with conventional reductionist track that tries to demonstrate complicated ailments by examining human gene, Systems Biology is described by the vision that the implied mechanism of complicated ailments is likely to become the dysregulation of diverse interconnected cellular paths.

 

With the development of technology and science, Translational Pharmacology has developed as a modern branch to face today’s healthcare requirement and is believed as an expansion of clinical pharmacology.

 

Pharmacogenetics survey for the target of medication improvement has, in the past, concentrated almost completely on the impact of differences in human genes for giving rise to a particular adverse effect.

 

Computational Toxicology is actually a vibrant and quickly improving branch that combines data and information from a diversity of sources to improve mathematical and computer-founded models to better recognize and foresee adverse health impacts caused via chemicals, like pharmaceuticals and environmental pollutants.

 

A perfect ontology should authorize the mapping of datum at different standards of hierarchy. Computational designing of biological frameworks can accomplish combination along various dimensions.

 

In Summary, Bricolage is actually a methodological procedure that, in case of a public situation, alters and develops not only while but for the sake of the course activity. To do this demands a track of (Biology-Transnational Pharmacology-Toxicology Computation) as an interdisciplinarity approach where habitual disciplinary borders are not merely crossed but the analytical scopes of these diverse disciplines are actively used.

 

Who this course is for:

People from whole of the world, who have an interest in the following approaches: 1) Biology, 2) Translational Pharmacology, 3) Computational Toxicology, 4) Pharmacogenetics, 5) Computational Modeling Tactics, 6) The Art of Literature, 7) Chemical Biology, 8) Biochemistry, 9) Cheminformatics, 10) Bioinformatics, and 11) Biomedicine. And this course contains thirty-nine resource.

 

By Maram Abdel Nasser Taha Shtaya

Pharmacist, American Studies Instructor, Author and Researcher who is teaching on Udemy.

BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS

Collaboration equals Alignment in Open Targets

by former Operations Director of Open Targets, Jessica Vamathevan

 

To find out about Open Targets go to:

www.opentargets.org/

It has been a busy term for the 49Women in Science Committee, which was formed five years ago after identifying the need for supports and guidance for young women pursuing a career in STEM. Our fall 2022 student event was held on-campus on October 13. Students had the privilege of listening to guest speaker Dr. Fiona Brinkman, SFU professor in Bioinformatics and head of the Brinkman Lab. She shared her educational and career journey, inspiring those in attendance with what is possible.

 

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