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FOLLOW THE MONEY: Big Grants in Biomedical Computing

Several big-dollar initiatives received NIH funding in late 2010

In the current economic climate, every research dollar counts. Fortunately, when it comes to biomedical computing, not everyone has been left counting change. Several big-dollar initiatives received...
brain, immunity, network
Apr, 01, 2011
NewsBytes: Winter 2005-2006
T-Rex in the Slow Lane by Kristen Cobb   Tyrannosaurus rex is often pictured baring its teeth, crouching, and running swiftly after its prey, but these images are largely based on human fancy...
Jan, 01, 2006
On Simulating Growth and Form

Simulations can teach us how young bodies and faces develop; how an artery compensates for decades of fatty plaque deposits by growing and thickening its walls; how tissue engineers can best coax endothelial cells to develop into organized sheets of skin for burn patients; and how cancerous tumors invade neighboring tissue.

For better or for worse, and on many levels, our tissues never stop growing and changing. While developing from childhood to old age, we grow not only bone, cartilage, fat, muscle and skin, but also...
Apr, 01, 2008
A Tipping Point for Function Prediction
There comes a tipping point in systems-biology studies of gene function where knowing some genes’ functions can, using a computational approach, help hone in on the functions of other genes....
Apr, 01, 2010
Biological Evidence for Turing Patterns

Mouse hair development patterns follow Turing's predictions

In the 1950s, computer science pioneer Alan Turing suggested an elegantly simple mechanism for how biological patterns such as scales, feathers, and hair might form. Now, more than fifty years later...
Apr, 01, 2007
Point/Counterpoint: Should there be a separate funding mechanism for the development and maintenance of software and infrastructure?
  POINT/   NO:  Grant applications for the development and maintenance of software and infrastructure should compete with basic research applications. Biomedicine has a strong...
Jul, 01, 2009
Lung Tumors Recap Developmental Patterns

Principal component analysis of gene expression signatures may help determine prognosis

Researchers have long speculated that many of the genetic programs responsible for rapid growth of tumors are also important for the growth that occurs during normal embryonic development.   Now...
Oct, 01, 2010
Computing Has Changed Biology Forever

And people are starting to notice

In 1991, a prescient editorial in Nature by Harvard’s Walter Gilbert, PhD, (“Towards a paradigm shift in biology”) included these observations on the utility and impact of computing...
Apr, 01, 2006
Where Tuberculosis Meets Computation: 10 Points of Intersection

Computation offers a window into a disease often described as a black box

The growing threats of multi-drug resistant (MDR) and extensively drug resistant (XDR) tuberculosis (TB) are spurring worldwide interest in faster and more innovative research approaches, such as...
Jun, 06, 2012
Evolution and HIV: Using Computational Phylogenetics to Close In On a Killer

The study of HIV evolution is not only critical to fighting the virus; it has also driven advances in the computational tools used to study evolution in general.

When Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859, it would be decades before HIV would jump from monkeys to humans and set off a devastating worldwide pandemic. But evolution is at the heart of...
Jul, 01, 2009
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