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Putting Heads Together
MICCAI 2007, the 10th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention. What: MICCAI typically attracts over 600 world leading scientists, engineers and...
Oct, 01, 2007
On Your Mark, Get Set, Build Infrastructure: The NCBC Launch

The first four National Centers for Biomedical Computing take off

WHY NATIONAL CENTERS? Four National Centers for Biomedical Computing were launched by the NIH in 2004 with $20 million in funding for each center over five years. The reason: We need to make...
Jun, 01, 2005
Three New Centers
The National Institutes of Health Roadmap for Medical Research has recently completed the first stage of an ambitious program to expand the computational infrastructure and software tools needed to...
Jan, 01, 2006
Trawling for Drug-Gene Relationships

Database automatically mines literature for drug-gene relationships--and does it as well as manually curated databases.

When a drug saves one person but makes another ill, a bitter lesson in genetic differences often follows. With many such lessons already under our collective belts, researchers are using existing...
Jan, 01, 2010
Digging Into Pixels: Radiogenomics Extracts Meaning

Seeking a non-invasive approach to cancer diagnosis and prognosis

In a radiological image, a tumor’s edges might appear fuzzy or crisp; its shape could range from oval to many-lobed; and its density and texture might vary across the tumor. To determine...
imaging, radiogenomics
Jun, 19, 2013
The Top Ten Advances of the Last Decade & The Top Ten Challenges of the Next Decade

A recognition of biocomputing's successes and a prediction of what's to come

The last ten years have seen huge leaps in biomedical computing. We now have new ways to integrate and understand vast quantities of data; the capacity for multi-scale biological modeling; and a...
bioinformatics tools, biomedical computing, CAD, computational modeling, data mining, disease surveillance, dynamic modeling, education, eric jakobsson, function prediction, genetic association, genome annotation, in silico screening, medical informatics, neuromodeling, prosthetics, sequence alignment, structure prediction, systems biology, systems biomedicine, telemedicine, tomography
Jun, 01, 2005
Betting on Genome Interpretation

Six startups jockey for a place at the table. Who will succeed?

A handful of startups are wagering that genome interpretation is the next big thing.    Why is this business space so hot?  “Once you can produce a better faster genome, thanks...
Jun, 20, 2013
Where Proteins Go To Work

Predicting protein localization

Joe works in a factory; Jane works in a hospital; protein X works in the Golgi apparatus. Just as one might guess a worker’s job by knowing where he or she is employed, biologists can guess a...
Apr, 01, 2006
Recognizing and Encouraging Timely Dissemination
The availability of free and open access data, models, and software indisputably accelerates scientific progress. Unfortunately, dissemination necessitates organization, documentation, and quality...
Jan, 01, 2010
Breathing Life Into Paper
The edict that academics must “publish or perish” serves not merely to advance careers, but also to stress the importance of transmitting knowledge from scientist to scientist and...
Jan, 01, 2006
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