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Editor's Picks Fall 2005

Open Source reflections; designing with code re-use; and Cygwin

Do you have a few favorite books that you recommend to anyone with an interest in biomedical computing? Are there software products or Web sites that you love to evangelize? We’d like to open...
Sep, 01, 2005
The BiGG Picture

A virtual metabolic network represents intracellular traffic

It’s hard to imagine a map depicting the daily flow of traffic on water, wheels and foot throughout San Diego—or any large city—over the course of a day. “That map can...
Apr, 01, 2007
Profiles in Computer Science Courage Part I: Reflections on the rewards of plunging into biomedicine

Interviews with Leonidas Guibas, Ron Shamir, Michael Black, David Haussler, Daphne Koller, Erin Halperin, Gene Myers, Paul Groth and Bruce Donald

To a computer scientist, the fields of biology and medicine can seem like the vast Pacific Ocean, says Leonidas Guibas, PhD, professor of computer science at Stanford University. “You go to the...
Careers, computer science
Apr, 01, 2011
Continuum Mechanical Modeling of Biological Growth
Unlike most classical engineering materials, biological tissues can adapt to external stimuli by growing in volume: Skin grows in response to wounding; muscles grow in response to exercise; cancer...
Apr, 01, 2011
Computing Has Changed Biology Forever

And people are starting to notice

In 1991, a prescient editorial in Nature by Harvard’s Walter Gilbert, PhD, (“Towards a paradigm shift in biology”) included these observations on the utility and impact of computing...
Apr, 01, 2006
From Sight to Insight: Visualization tools yield biomedical success stories
They're more than just pretty pictures adorning office walls and presentation slides. Beamed into operating room computer monitors, they're guiding the scalpels of brain surgeons. Dancing...
Jan, 01, 2012
The Dawn of Brain-Machine Interfaces

Brain implants are giving hope to the disabled and revolutionizing neuroscience

Matthew Nagle can move a cursor on a computer screen with only the power of his thoughts. It’s a remarkable feat for anyone, but especially momentous for Nagle, who is paralyzed from the neck...
Aug, 31, 2005
Clinical Decision Support: Providing Quality Healthcare with Help from a Computer
In a classic cartoon, a physician offers a second opinion from his computer.  The patient looks horrified: How absurd to think that a computer could have better judgment than a human doctor! But...
Jan, 01, 2010
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
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
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