Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
An Uphill Challenge
RunBot, already the world’s fastest bipedal robot, has now also learned to keep its balance when walking up ramps. “We have achieved a synthesis of different functionalities, between...
Oct, 01, 2007
Welcome Back

About this issue of Biomedical Computation Review

One of the main goals of this magazine is to create and foster a sense of community among the diverse disciplines that make up biomedical computation (hence our tagline: diverse disciplines, one...
Sep, 01, 2005
Computing the Ravages of Time: Using Algorithms To Tackle Alzheimer’s Disease

Biomarker research, genetics, and imaging are all coming into play

In 1906, at a small medical meeting in Tübingen, Germany, physician Alois Alzheimer gave a now-famous presentation about a puzzling patient. At age 51, Auguste D.’s memory was failing...
Oct, 01, 2007
Parkinson’s Culprit Modeled

A computational model of alpha-synuclein as it aggregates

Under a microscope, the curious protein clumps that dot the brains of Parkinson’s patients stick out like the culprits they are. But no one has yet caught the protein—alpha-synuclein...
Jul, 01, 2007
Brain Folding

Computation shows that the skull guides the wrinkling

In the four months before birth, a fetus’s brain grows from a smooth tube of neurons into a highly crinkled, convolved mass of tissue. Because the cerebral cortex has a surface area nearly...
Jun, 01, 2010
MEART: The Semi-Living Artist

Cultured brain cells draw pictures

MEART’s creators link the basic components of the brain (isolated neurons) to a mechanical body (robotic arms) through the mediation of a digital processing engine across the Internet. The goal...
Oct, 01, 2010
Computer Vision that Mimics Human Vision

Computer vision program rivals the human ability to rapidly recognize objects in a complex picture

Our brains can recognize most of the things we pass on an evening stroll: Cars, buildings, trees, and people all register even at a great distance or from an odd angle. Now, a new computer vision...
Jul, 01, 2007
Assembling The Aging Puzzle: Computation Helps Connect the Pieces

The complexity and variability of aging itself, along with the fragmented nature of researchers’ current understanding of aging, call for tools that can help scientists dig through mounds of data to find often subtle connections.

Jeanne Louise Calment of Arles, France rode a bicycle until she was 100 years old. When she gave up smoking at age 117, her doctor suspected it was out of pride. (She couldn’t see well enough...
Apr, 01, 2008
Packing It All In: Curricula for Biomedical Computing

Balancing Breadth and Depth

The last decade saw a proliferation of training programs at the intersection of life science and computation, with more than 60 new degree and certificate programs launched in the United States alone...
Sep, 01, 2005
Meet the Skeptics: Why Some Doubt Biomedical Models - and What it Takes to Win Them Over

Disentangling the different types of skeptics and what modelers can learn from each.

What are the telltale signs of a modeling talk at a biology conference? Just look for the sighs, shifting, and eye-rolling in the audience, says Donald C. Bolser, PhD, professor of physiological...
Jun, 05, 2012
  • ‹‹
  • 2 of 4
  • ››

SHARE THIS

  • Tweet
  • Email

RELATED ARTICLES

Bayesian Networks: A Quick Intro

06/01/05 by Karen Sachs

Twin Curses Plague Biomedical Data Analysis

How to deal with too many dimensions and too...

09/01/05 by Ray Somorjai, PhD

Resolution Limits of Optical Microscopy and the Mind

How precise an image can fluorescence...

09/01/11 by T. Ursell, PhD and KC Huang, PhD

Continuum Mechanical Modeling of Biological Growth

04/01/11 by Manuel K. Rausch

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