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Fulfilling the Promise of the NIH Roadmap Through National Engagement by the National Centers for Biomedical Computing (NCBC) and the CTSA Informatics
For major team-based Roadmap initiatives, National Institutes of Health (NIH) officials expect grantees to look beyond the focus of their individual projects to build bridges not only among funded...
Oct, 01, 2008
Infrastructure and Workforce Needs in Biomedical Informatics and Computational Biology
In science, there is a need to balance research in domain sciences and the infrastructure to support that research. Basic research mediated through peer review is understood to produce useful...
Jan, 01, 2007
Update on Biomedical Computation at NIH

Helping newcomers understand the lay of the land

As a program manager in biomedical computing and computational biology at the National Institutes of Health, I field many questions, particularly from new investigators. They ask questions like:...
Apr, 01, 2010
Bridging the Scientific Divide: Enabling Sharing through Biomedical Computing

How to share knowledge, data, tools, and computational resources in a sustainable manner

Once upon a time, a deep divide existed between scientists who did and those who did not have easy access to scientific content (journals, lectures, data), hardware (imaging devices, lab instruments...
sharing
Apr, 01, 2011
Biocomputation Startups: Where Does Value Lie?

An opportunity and a challenge

When discussing biocomputation startups, there’s one thing people agree on: These days, they don’t generate much excitement among venture capitalists.   “In the 1990s, there...
Apr, 01, 2007
Successful Collaborations: Helping biomedicine and computation play well together

Collaborations are a fact of life for interdisciplinary fields like biomedical computing, and social scientists can help researchers understand how to make them more productive

Social scientists who study science have noticed a trend: More and more researchers are collaborating. Over the last twenty years, the number of co-authored papers has increased in every scientific...
Jul, 01, 2008
Mining Biomedical Literature: Using Computers to Extract Knowledge Nuggets

Researchers are not simply retrieving and repackaging what is already known, but are also deriving new knowledge by discovering connections that were previously unnoticed.

Not long ago, reading biomedical literature involved hours in the library combing through rows of dusty periodicals—not to mention pocketfuls of change for the copy machine. Now, although the...
Jul, 01, 2008
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
Bringing the Fruits of Computation to Bear on Human Health: It’s a Tough Job but the NIH Has to Do It
The National Institutes of Health are on a mission: To understand and tackle the problems of human health. To make that daunting problem approachable, 15 of the 20 institutes divvy up human health...
Oct, 05, 2012
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