Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
The Golden Age of Public Databases: Speeding Biomedical Discovery

Public databases impact not only how research is done but what kind of research is done in the first place.

The setting: a scientific conference in January 2008. The speaker, Bruce Ponder, MD, PhD, an oncology professor at Cambridge University, is describing a previously unknown link between a particular...
Oct, 01, 2008
VIEW THIS ISSUE IN PDF
Download the full issue of here.
Jul, 02, 2013
VIEW THIS ISSUE IN PDF
Download the full issue here.
Jan, 01, 2010
Follow the Money: Big Grants in Biomedical Computing

The clear winner: Big Data

 

Several biomedical computing projects received big money in the fall of 2012. If there’s one clear winner, it’s “Big Data”: three of the grants focus on building new...
Feb, 19, 2013
Imaging Collections: How They're Stacking Up

As barriers to massive imaging collections fall, researchers can look at human systems in their entirety rather than in pieces

In the beginning there was the Visible Human. It broke new ground by gathering some 2,000 serial images from a death row inmate’s cadaver, and was the first time researchers had sectioned a...
Jul, 01, 2007
Bacteria Prepare Themselves

Microbes react to environmental changes before they occur.

When we see dark clouds, we might grab an umbrella before heading outside.  We’ve long believed that showing such foresight requires a brain and complex information-processing capability...
Oct, 01, 2008
Homing in on the Minimum Genome
Scientists have long wondered how many genes are necessary to support life. This knowledge could be used to construct new forms of artificial life to efficiently produce better biofuels or drugs....
Jan, 01, 2008
The Function of DNA Form
According to a new computational analysis of DNA structure, variations in DNA shape—along the grooves of the double helix—may play an important role in defining how the genome works. The...
Jul, 01, 2009
Virtual Genomic Scans with Real Data

HAP-SAMPLE takes real data as the template for simulations

Trying to find the genetic causes of a human disease requires lots of data. These days, researchers scan the genomes of people who do and don’t have a particular disease and look for genome-...
Jan, 01, 2008
Window into Microbial Behavior

Metagenomes give a picture of the genes driving metabolic processes important to bacterial growth and survival in different environments.

We know they are there, but most microbial denizens of deep oceans, sea floor vents, even our own intestines, remain a mystery. Because most microbes won’t grow in the lab, researchers have few...
Jul, 01, 2008
  • ‹‹
  • 2 of 6
  • ››

SHARE THIS

  • Tweet
  • Email

POPULAR ARTICLES

Big Data Analytics In Biomedical Research

Can the complexities of biology be boiled down to Amazon.com-style recommendations?  The examples here suggest possible pathways to an intelligent healthcare system with big data at its core.

01/02/12 by Katharine Miller

AlloPathFinder User Profile: Jung-Chi Liao

Columbia’s Jung-Chi Liao seeks pathways within proteins using AlloPathFinder, a Simbios tool he co-developed while at Stanford.

10/01/09 by Kristin Sainani, PhD, and Katharine Miller

More Than Fate: Computation Addresses Hot Topics in Stem Cell Research

Using computational models, researchers are gaining traction toward understanding what makes a stem cell a stem cell; how gene expression drives stem cell differentiation; why studying stem cell heterogeneity is important; and, ultimately, how stem cells control their fate.

04/01/10 by Katharine Miller

Popular Tags

DATA MINING  visualization

genomics  SIMULATION neuroscience

biomechanics Systems Biology

DRUG DISCOVERY Cancer DNA

Molecular Dynamics bioinformatics

SUBSCRIBE TO

RSS Feed
Subscribe to Print Edition
simbios logo

Supported by the National
Institutes of Health through
the NIH Roadmap for
Medical Research Grant.

Stanford University
James H. Clark Center S231
318 Campus Drive, MC: 5448
Stanford, CA 94305-5444

  • About
  • Archive
  • Contact
  • Subscribe