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The BecA-ILRI Hub annual workshop on Introduction to Molecular Biology and Bioinformatics took place in Nairobi 09–20 May 2016 (photo credit: BecA-ILRI Hub/Marvin Wasonga)
Dr. Nurcan Tuncbag is a Turkish International Rising Talent from the L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Programme recognized for her work in bioinformatics.
Dr. Tuncbag attended the Training Course on Intellectual Property and Physical Sciences for the participants in the L’Oréal-UNESCO "For Women in Science Programme”, organized at WIPO Headquarters in Geneva from March 18 to 20, 2019.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.
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
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
Jorge Andrade, PhD, director of bioinformatics for the Center for Research Informatics, in his office at the Knapp Center Monday, Sept. 16, 2013, at the University of Chicago. (Photo by Robert Kozloff).
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
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).
CRI Workshop Learning Series
Bioinformatics Workshop 2014
Harper Court, Chicago
Photo by Sara Serritella/ITM
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).
Quantum resonance magnetic analyzeris involved in medical, bioinformatics, electronic engineering science high-tech innovation projects. It with quantum medical science as the theoretical basis, and the application of advanced electronic equipment acquisition human cells weak magnetic field by scientific analysis, the participants to be the health condition and main problems make the analysis judgment, and puts forward the prevention and control of the standard advice. Quantum weak magnetic resonance detector is a body comprehensive health care consulting and frontier health science of personalized guidelines, have overall, non-invasive, practical, simple and convenient, economy, easy to expand characteristics and advantages, along with the scientific research work thorough and development of the cause of human health will make more contribution, with broad development and application prospect.
This article is provide from [Yi Kang],please indicate the source address reprinted:http://www.quantumanalyzer.net/news/computer-diagnoses-health-instrument/419.html
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
The BecA-ILRI Hub annual workshop on Introduction to Molecular Biology and Bioinformatics took place in Nairobi 09–20 May 2016 (photo credit: BecA-ILRI Hub/Marvin Wasonga)
Melaku Gedil takes guests on a tour of the Center. He explains that the Center is to expand the services in the areas of genotyping, bioinformatics, cytogenetics (ploidy analysis), genetics engineering, in vitro propagation/tissue culture, pathogen diagnostics, and training. Photo by Oliver Jeffrey/IITA. (file name: DSC_7058)
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.
Bioinformatics building FABI square located on the main campus of the University of Pretoria in Hatfield, Bulidings main function is agriculture and foresty
http://www.urbigene.com/geneticprog/
This applet implements a 'genetic programming' algorithm. The java program takes as input a table of result and a list of expected numbers. Top-Left: table of data used for input. Last columns are: expected result, normalized expected result, normalized computed result, fitness (|computed-expected|). Top-Right: nine steps of the evolution process. In each setp, on the X axis are displayed the expected values and the comuted values (calculated from the evolving methematical function) are on the Y axis. The fitness is diplayed. Bottom-Left: parameters,"weight" of each function. Bottom-Right: The definition of the current best curve.
From left are: Jorge Andrade, PhD, director of Bioinformatics; Wenjun Kang, scientific programmer; Jianpeng Xu, PhD; Riyue Bao, PhD; Chunling Zhang, PhD; and Lei Huang, PhD, all bioformaticians, in the Knapp Center Monday, Sept. 16, 2013, at the University of Chicago. (Photo by Robert Kozloff)
Laura Furmanski, Senior Vice-President, Business Area Bioinformatics, QIAGEN, USA at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary
Team photo for the create and inspire public engagement course.
David Martin (Bioinformatics), Remco Stam (Blight resistance), Alessandro Madeo (molecular Genetics)
It really isn't the promo for a BBC comedy series.. (Thanks Rhys)
Mr. Rommel Anthony Benites Palomino, second-year masters’ student at the Department of Computer Science and Technology, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, presented his first publication at 11th International Conference on Mathematical and Computational Methods in Science and Engineering (MACMESE'09), on Nov. 7th in Baltimore, MD. The research paper titled “Identifying Significant Genes with FM/CM-GA” is supervised by Prof. Lily Liang, Department of Computer Science and Information Technology. And it is a collaboration with Dr. Deepak Kumar at the Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences. Also on the research team are Prof. Zhao Lu at Tuskegee University and Mr. Vinay Mandal, a professional from bioinformatics industry. Mr. Benites Palomino’s presentation received positive feedback at the conference. This project is supported by USDA and UDC Agriculture Experiment Station via grant “Developing Fuzzy-set-theory-based Data Mining Methodologies for Diabetes Data Analysis”. Dr. Liang and Mr. Benites Palomino would also like to acknowledge the support provided by their department, school and the Division of Student Affairs.
The BecA-ILRI Hub annual workshop on Introduction to Molecular Biology and Bioinformatics took place in Nairobi 09–20 May 2016 (photo credit: BecA-ILRI Hub/Marvin Wasonga)