Located on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus and the first next-generation sequencing service provider in the region, UB's Genomics and Bioinformatics Core Facility provides high-quality services ...
Atul Butte, M.D., Ph.D., a researcher, startup founder and prominent voice on the use of biomedical data and AI in healthcare, died on June 13 at the age of 55. Butte was a professor at the University ...
Mark Ragan is Professor and Head of Genomics and Computational Biology at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience, and Adjunct Professor in the School of Information Technology and Electrical ...
Cancer is the second leading cause of death worldwide. Since age is one of the risk factors for the development of cancer, ...
Billions of dollars are flowing into computational biology. From working to find improved outcomes for health issues to better policy planning, it’s possible to find enormous value inside bio-data.
For doctors trying to treat people who have symptoms that have no clear cause, gene-sequencing technologies might help in pointing them to a diagnosis. But the vast amount of data generated can make ...
Bioinformatics is rapidly changing the course of human health and history. Scientists and researchers use data like never before to save countless lives each day. Bioinformatics fuels new discoveries ...
We are living in an era where biology has become synonymous with big data due to the ever-increasing amount of data being generated by technologies such as next-generation sequencing. Bioinformatics ...
The Center for Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics (CBFG), in Miami University's College of Arts and Science, is a state-of-the-art research and training facility available for all members of the ...
Do you want to convert big data into understandable models that might change the world? With a graduate degree in Systems Biology and Bioinformatics, you will combine your love of math, statistics, ...
When a tree dies, it forms the foundation for new life: In a slow, invisible process, leaves, wood and roots are gradually decomposed—not by wind or weather, but by millions and millions of tiny ...