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Initials of the Structural Bioinformatics and Computational Biochemistry Unit, made from soft drink cans consumed in the lab. Installation by Robert G. D'Rozario and Chze-Ling Wee (2008).
[photographed with Olympus E420 (Zuiko 25mm pancake lens), stitched with Hugin OS X]
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.
vaginal microbiome-We offer a wide range of professional microbial genome analysis to address your reproductive tract microbial research based on our High-throughput sequencing technology platforms and expertise in bioinformatics analysis.
230619 The potential of research data – How research infrastructures support new opportunities and benefits for society
19 – 20 June 2023, Lund, Sweden
Panel discussion 3: The Future is now, and it’s digital: Highlights on data and emerging technologies.
Erik Huizer, CEO, Géant
Darja Fišer, Director, Common Language Resources and Technology Infrastructure (CLARIN-ERIC)
Matthew Thakur, Senior Programme Manager European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI)
Ilse van Bemmel, Project Scientist, Joint Institute for VLBI (JIV-ERIC), and Event Horizon Telescope Team Member 5
Liane Hughes, Project Leader, Covid-19 & Pandemic Preparedness Data Portal,nSciLifeLab
Photo: Josefine Stenersen
iMAL, Brussels, May 2014
William Latham is a computer art pioneer, internationally known for his organic artworks based on the processes of evolution. Up to 1993, he was a Research Fellow at The IBM UK Scientific Centre. He then founded Computer Artworks Ltd, a game studio that produced the video game The THING. Since 2007, Latham is Professor of Computer Art at Goldsmiths, where he applies his evolutionary rule-based approach to the domain of protein folding, scientific visualization and gamification in collaboration with the Bioinformatics department, neuroscientists and Prof. Frederic Leymarie.
George Tinega is a graduate student in Bioinformatics and Molecular Biology at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology. His research fellowship at BecA-ILRI (2013) is on "Molecular characterization of Salmonella isolates obtained from Wambizzi pig abattoir in Kampala, Uganda" (photo credit: ILRI/George Tinega).
From the 7-19 August 2016, the Biosciences eastern and central Africa-International Livestock Research Institute (BecA-ILRI) Hub and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) conducted a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics at the ILRI campus in Nairobi, Kenya (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub/Sylvia Muthoni).
Ken Kemner is the originator and leader of the Molecular Environmental Science Group at Argonne, an integrated multidisciplinary research group that makes use of synchrotron radiation and lab-based environmental chemistry and biology approaches for biogeochemical research, with a subsequent focus on the incorporation of pyrosequencing and bioinformatics tools for metabolic and microbial community analysis. More »
Photo by Wes Agresta / Courtesy Argonne National Laboratory.
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Photo by Mohd Faiz Fakruddin bin Hassan / Bach in Bioinformatics / 2nd Prize Winner of MSU Architectural Photography Contest
I’m writing new nodes for www.knime.org. For example, this new node reads a file of genotype and generate a quality control for the markers and another for the samples. In this picture, the QC for the SNP was sorted and we keep the 10 first rows, we call the UCSC/mysql to get the position of the markers . Then each marker is searched in pubmed and we visualize the results.
From the 7-19 August 2016, the Biosciences eastern and central Africa-International Livestock Research Institute (BecA-ILRI) Hub and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) conducted a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics at the ILRI campus in Nairobi, Kenya (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub/Sylvia Muthoni).
Session IV : Made in Brussels , made in Belgium - 28 October 2013
Yves Moreau , Professor of Bioinformatics at University of Leuven and researcher at the iMinds Future Health department
TEDX BRUSSELS 2013 - Belgium - Brussels - October 2013 © TEDx Brussels/Scorpix
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and European Bioinformatics Institute top list of most influential UK research
The Bio-informatics building in the photo is of the FABI 2 building, it is located to the east of Oom Gert
In professor Michelle Arbeitman's lab, post-doctoral fellows Matt Lebo (right, Ph.D. in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics '08) and Saori Lobbia analyze DNA gel electrophoresis data with Thomas Goldman (left), a Ph.D. candidate in molecular biology. Photo by: Philip Channing
From the 7-19 August 2016, the Biosciences eastern and central Africa-International Livestock Research Institute (BecA-ILRI) Hub and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) conducted a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics at the ILRI campus in Nairobi, Kenya (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub/Sylvia Muthoni).
From the 7-19 August 2016, the Biosciences eastern and central Africa-International Livestock Research Institute (BecA-ILRI) Hub and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) conducted a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics at the ILRI campus in Nairobi, Kenya (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub/Sylvia Muthoni).
From the 7-19 August 2016, the Biosciences eastern and central Africa-International Livestock Research Institute (BecA-ILRI) Hub and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) conducted a training workshop on Advanced Genomics and Bioinformatics at the ILRI campus in Nairobi, Kenya (photo: BecA-ILRI Hub/Sylvia Muthoni).
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.
Kumar Hari, Ph.D. has nearly 10 years experience in target validation, program management and business development through positions at Isis Pharmaceuticals and as Director and Co-founder of cBio, Inc., a bioinformatics consulting firm. Prior to founding cBio, Kumar served as Scientific Program Officer for the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the State Stem Cell Agency, and as Associate Director of Business Development at Ibis Biosciences, a subsidiary of Abbott Molecular, Inc. During his career, Kumar has made scientific contributions to the fields of chromosome biology, functional genomics, and bioinformatics.
Kumar Hari received his B.S. in Genetics from the University of California, Davis and Ph.D. in Biology from the University of California, San Diego through The Salk Institute for Biological Studies.
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.