Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
Extinct Sabercat Brought to Life

Using software designed for stress testing in engineering, researchers have modeled an American sabercat's skull in the highest resolution vertebrate animal model to date.

Wildlife biologists can watch a lion stalk its prey, but paleontologists must examine fossils to understand how the extinct saber-toothed cat hunted. Researchers now have modeled an American sabercat...
Jan, 01, 2008
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
Grand Challenge Competition Provides Rich Data Set to Improve Joint Contact Force Predictions
There are numerous musculoskeletal modeling methods available to make predictions of muscle and joint contact forces. While such predictions can help improve treatments for movement-related disorders...
knee
Jan, 02, 2012
Computational Biomechanics: Making Strides Toward Patient Care

Moving from intuition to evidence-based intervention

To understand how muscles contract and joints flex, researchers have dissected cadavers and experimented with animals. They can describe how bones, muscles, and tendons connect in a complicated...
Jan, 01, 2007
The Physiome: Standardizing the Physiome

A closer look at the curation of models discussed in The Physiome: A Mission Imperative

Multi-scale quantitative models need to be validated and reproducible if they are to be useful for clinical workflows, says Hunter. The Physiome infrastructure developed by Hunter, Dr Poul Nielsen...
Jun, 01, 2010
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
Computation Competitions Take Off!

Contests involving algorithms for protein structure prediction, natural language processing, and computer-aided disease detection are giving researchers a jolt of adrenalin and moving these fields forward

From all parts of the computational spectrum, researchers are duking it out: They are throwing their algorithms into the ring to see which one will out-perform all others on a particular task....
Jul, 01, 2006
Human Versus Machine: Biomedical expertise meets computer automation

Computers and human experts duke it out over who is better at diagnosing disease, interpreting images, or predicting protein structure

Dorothy Rosenthal tenses over her microscope, peering at the problematic nucleus on the Pap smear yet again. “It’s abnormal,” she decides, and then hesitates. “No, it’s...
Jul, 01, 2006
Reaching Under the Hood of a 20-year-old Musculoskeletal Model

Confidence boost for modelers

It’s often said that all models are wrong, but some are useful. And one model that certainly falls in the “useful” category is the human lower-limb model that Scott Delp published...
Jun, 01, 2010
Multiscale Modeling in Biomedical Research

New approaches extend multiscale models to represent cellular mesoscales and bridge from molecular to cellular models

In an era of increasingly comprehensive molecular characterizations of living systems, computation has emerged as a key technology to facilitate integrative understanding of biological mechanisms....
Feb, 19, 2013
  • ‹‹
  • 6 of 7
  • ››

SHARE THIS

  • Tweet
  • Email

RELATED ARTICLES

On Your Mark, Get Set, Build Infrastructure: The NCBC Launch

The first four National Centers for Biomedical...

06/01/05 by Katharine Miller with an Introduction by Eric Jakobsson, PhD

Biomedical Computation Space

Defining biomedical computation

06/01/05 by David Paik, PhD, Executive Editor

The Last Word

06/01/05 by Katharine Miller

Welcome Back

About this issue of Biomedical Computation...

09/01/05 by David Paik, PhD, Executive Editor

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