Personal tools
You are here: Home Members StefaniaParodi CALL FOR PAPERS COMPUTATIONAL SYSTEMS BIOINFORMATICS CSB2009
Navigation
Log in


Forgot your password?
 
Document Actions

CALL FOR PAPERS COMPUTATIONAL SYSTEMS BIOINFORMATICS CSB2009

What Convention Meeting
When 2009-08-10 09:00 to
2009-08-13 17:00
Where Stanford, California
Contact Email CSB2009@LifeSciencesSociety.org
Attendees Program Committee, Tatsuya Akutsu, Kyoto University, Chris Bailey-Kellogg, Dartmouth, Pierre Baldi, University of California Irvine, Liming Cai, University of Georgia, Bill Cannon, PNNL, Jake Chen, Indiana University, Bhaskar DasGupta, University of Illinois Chicago, Andrey Gorin, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Matt Hibbs, Princeton, Wen Lian Hsu, Academia Sinica, Tamer Kahveci, University of Florida, Carl Kingsford, University of Maryland, Christina Leslie, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Jing Li, Case Western Reserve, Ann Loraine, University of North Carolina Charlotte, Satoru Miyano, University of Tokyo, Sean Mooney, Indiana University, Bernard Moret, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, William Noble, University of Washington, Frank Olken, NSF, Isidore Rigoutsos, IBM TJ Watson Research Center, David Sankoff, University of Ottawa, Victor Solovyev, Royal Holloway, University of London, Gary Stormo, Washington University, Haixu Tang, Indiana University, Eberhard Voit, Georgia Tech, Wei Wang, University of North Carolina, Limsoon Wong, University of Singapore, Michael Zhang, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Xuegong Zhang, Tsinghua University, China, Peter Markstein, in silico Labs, LLC, Ying Xu, University of Georgia
Add event to calendar vCal
iCal
by Stefania Parodi last modified 2008-12-03 13:50

The conference's goal is to facilitate exchange of ideas and collaborations between computational scientists and biologists by presenting cutting-edge computational and systems biology research findings. Such research has an interdisciplinary character. Computer science and mathematical modeling papers must contain a concise description of the biological problem being solved, and biology papers should show how computation or analysis affects the results.

Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): • Sequence comparison • Promoter Analysis and Discovery • Biological Data Mining and Visualization • Evolution and Phylogenetics • Protein Structures and Complexes • Microarray Data Analysis • Pathways, Networks, Systems Biology • SNPs and Haplotyping • Biological Literature Mining • Executable Biology • Mathematical and quantitative models of cellular and multicellular systems • High Performance Bio-Computing • Functional Genomics • Comparative Genomics • Proteomic Data Analysis • Metagenomics • Drug Discovery • Chemical Genetics • RNAi • Bioenergy • MicroRNA • Biomedical Applications • Translational Research • Microbial community analysis • Synthetic Biological Systems

More information about this event…


Powered by Plone CMS, the Open Source Content Management System

This site conforms to the following standards: